Lambarek Boumaarafi Explained

Lambarek Boumaarafi (born 1966 in Meskiana)[1] is a former second lieutenant of the special intervention group (GIS) of the Algerian Army who, on 29 June 1992 in Annaba, assassinated Algerian president Mohamed Boudiaf.[2]

Assassination of Boudiaf

See main article: articles and Assassination of Mohamed Boudiaf. Twenty days after the assassination, a commission of inquiry named immediately after the assassination made its finding: it was a conspiracy. In support of this thesis, the six members of the commission, while noting that Boumaarafi had no "profile" of a kamikaze acting on his own initiative, noted the criminal negligence of security services which facilitated the task of the killer.

He was part of a special operations group (GIS) dependent on Département du Renseignement et de la Sécurité (DRS) responsible for various law enforcement operations. A brigade which, theoretically, was not charged with ensuring the safety of President Boudiaf.

This situation, and its confusing explanations,[3] have cast doubt on the reasons that led his superiors to assign him that day where as the protection of the Algerian president.

During the mutiny of Algiers Serkadji prison, in June 1995, that killed 100 people, including 96 prisoners, his disappearance was discussed.[4] It was a false rumor. He is still in prison, and in June 2007, his father says that he was not the assassin.[5]

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.liberation.fr/monde/1995/02/23/l-enigme-du-sous-lieutenant-boumaarafi_122365 L'énigme du sous-lieutenant Boumaarafi - Libération
  2. http://www.liberation.fr/monde/0101131555-l-enigme-du-sous-lieutenant-boumaarafi L'énigme du sous-lieutenant Boumaarafi - Libération
  3. https://www.humanite.fr/node/436987 L'espoir assassiné | Humanite
  4. http://www.liberation.fr/monde/1995/02/24/alger-decompte-100-morts-dans-la-mutinerie-de-serkadji_122237 Alger décompte 100 morts dans la mutinerie de Serkadji - Libération
  5. Web site: Archived copy . 2013-11-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131105171600/http://www.lesoirdalgerie.com/articles/2007/06/28/article.php?sid=55555&cid=2 . 2013-11-05 . dead .