Rachid Talbi El Alami représente le Roi à la cérémonie d'investiture du nouveau président chilien    Akhannouch préside une réunion sur la mise en œuvre de la réforme de l'enseignement supérieur    Tizi et M.L.I lancent «AMAL 2026» pour former 100 jeunes candidats aux législatives marocaines    Le stade Prince Moulay Abdellah sacré meilleur stade du monde en 2025    Ginebra: El Polisario señalado durante una conferencia sobre niños soldados    Le temps qu'il fera ce jeudi 12 mars 2026    Paris : le Maroc signe une Déclaration sur le financement de l'énergie nucléaire    La Kabylie frappe aux portes de l'Europe... Réception de Ferhat Mehenni au Parlement européen    Genève : Le Polisario pointé lors d'une conférence sur les enfants soldats    Nayef Aguerd va subir une intervention chirurgicale    Agadir : un nouveau stade de 15.000 places    Commerce de proximité : Cash Plus lance le paiement par QR Code    CGEM : Pharma 5 obtient le label RSE    Rabat: Remise des premiers labels "Musée du Maroc"    Nabyla Maan en concert exceptionnel à Rabat    Maroc : Les supporters sénégalais repasseront devant la justice le 16 mars    La justice néerlandaise blanchit un ancien employé des accusations d'espionnage pour le Maroc    GASPI : Afrique et Golfe main dans la main    Pourquoi les gouvernements qualifient-ils les mouvements de liberté de « terroristes » ?    Football congolais : le président de la FECOFOOT condamné à perpétuité    L'UE adopte de nouvelles sanctions contre 19 responsables et entités iraniens    Congrès US : le soutien au projet de loi visant à classer le polisario organisation terroriste s'élargit    La rapporteuse spéciale de l'ONU sur la torture attendue à Rabat et Laayoune    NOOR ATLAS : Bank of Africa appuie un nouveau programme solaire de 240 MW au Maroc    Moulay Abdellah meilleur stade au monde : le Maroc remporte le titre de « Stade de l'Année 2025 »    L'Algérien Abdelhak Benchikha nommé nouvel entraîneur de l'Ittihad Tanger    Maroc : l'accès des filles à l'enseignement supérieur reste limité, malgré les progrès de la scolarisation    Afrique. L'IA pour stimuler l'industrialisation    Marruecos y España se disputan la joya del Real Madrid Thiago Pitarch    Arrestation de six individus pour violences liées au sport à Casablanca    Le Chef du gouvernement préside une réunion pour le suivi de la mise en œuvre de la réforme du système de l'enseignement supérieur, de la recherche scientifique et de l'innovation    France : Les classes préparatoires marocaines dominent le palmarès des meilleures prépas étrangères    La Côte d'Ivoire investi dans le capital humain    Services marchands non financiers: 36% des patrons anticipent une hausse de l'activité    Alger : participation en baisse au «forum diplomatique» de soutien au Polisario    La pièce « Le porteur d'histoire » primée aux Molières arrive au Maroc    Renforcer le rapprochement des civilisations au cœur de la rencontre entre l'ambassadrice de Chine et le directeur de l'ICESCO    Coupe du monde 2026 : Trump assure à Infantino que l'Iran pourra participer    L'ambassadeur de France au Maroc, Christophe Lecourtier, pressenti pour diriger l'AFD    Thiago Pitarch, nouveau duel entre le Maroc et l'Espagne    Gessime Yassine, la nouvelle pépite marocaine qui séduit l'Europe    Trump menace l'Iran de "conséquences militaires sans précédent" si Téhéran mine le détroit d'Ormuz    Voici les hauteurs de pluies enregistrées ces dernières 24H    Ayra Starr signe son retour avec « Where Do We Go »    Ethiopie. Le livre de Abiy Ahmed devient une bibliothèque pour le public    Paris : Bourita s'entretient avec son homologue français    Le Maroc sous les projecteurs avec l'émission «Voyage Voyage» sur France Télévisions    Interdiction d'une fresque à Tanger : quand l'art s'arrête face aux autorités locales    







Merci d'avoir signalé!
Cette image sera automatiquement bloquée après qu'elle soit signalée par plusieurs personnes.



January 10, 1966 : « I saw Ben Barka get killed », L'Express' controversial cover
Publié dans Yabiladi le 10 - 01 - 2018

On January the 10th, 1966, L'Express published on its cover the testimony of a French man who witnessed the kidnapping, a few weeks earlier, of Mehdi Ben Barka. Seven days later, George Figon was found dead in his apartment. On January the 20th, an international arrest warrant was issued against General Oufkir and General Dlimi. The French weekly news magazine's story that caused a scandal. History.
On October 2017, the death of Mehdi Ben Barka, a Moroccan politician and leading founder of the National Union of Popular Forces (UNFP), was commemorated in France. 52 years after his controversial abduction, the investigation initiated to determine the circumstances of Ben Barka's disappearance is still open. Kidnapped in Paris on October the 29th, 1965, the Ben Barka affair was investigated by the French magazine which published a story with the testimony of George Figon.
Figon, in his version of the story, claimed that he participated to the kidnapping of Ben Barka, creating a wave of criticism among the French public opinion for several weeks. With the photo of the head of the left-wing party in Morocco on its cover, accompanied with a red and attractive headline, the story conducted by Jacques Derogy and Jean-Francois Kahn has pushed Charles de Gaulle, recently re-elected president of France, to consider the affair «hateful", calling during a press conference in February 1966 to question the progress of the investigation.
Two investigations
On the 26th of October 1965, Mehdi Ben Barka was in Geneva. He contacted Philippe Bernier, a journalist who was working on a documentary about decolonization. Their appointment was scheduled for Friday, 29th of October, at 12:15 at Brasserie Lipp, located at Boulevard Saint-Germain in Paris. On the day of his abduction, Ben Barka, who was accompanied by Thami Azemourri, a young Moroccan historian, was arrested by two police officers who were riding a Peugeot 403 car, and was never seen again.
On the 2nd of November, an investigation was opened by Judge Louis Zollinger and entrusted to the Brigade criminelle, the oldest and perhaps most famous, in charge of homicides, kidnapping, bomb attacks and investigations involving personalities, which was headed by Commissioner Bouvier. Meanwhile, Jacques Derogy and Jean-Francois Kahn were focused on their own investigation. That day, they met Philippe Bernier with Ben Barka's brother. «They informed us that two of Ben Barka's sworn enemies were miraculously present in Paris : Mohamed Oufkir, the Moroccan Interior Minister and Ahmed Dlimi, head of the Moroccan security services. Bernier was particularly worried about the role George Figon played in the affair as he disappeared since the meeting in the Brasserie Lipp», wrote Jacques Derogy in an article published in 1995.
The three journalists' meeting had led them to another unrevealed part of the story : a tête-à-tête with Pierre Lemarchaud, George Figon's lawyer. An article entitled «The strange coincidences in the Ben Barka's affair» was published following this meeting without attracting too much attention. The story focused on the searches carried out in the villa and in the house where Ben Barka was held.
The first article
Around mid-December, Georges Figon, having been the subject of an arrest warrant, contacted the two journalists. His first revelations were featured in a second article published on December the 20th, «without affecting the reelection of General de Gaulle». This article reports Figon's version of the story regarding the arrival of Dlimi and General Oufkir, then Minister of Interior in the villa where Ben Barka was kidnapped.
«In the evening, he (Mehdi Ben Barka) went to bed and we seized the opportunity to call Dlimi, head of the security services, and Oufkir, the Interior Minister. We briefly spoke as everyone of us knew perfectly what it was. Moroccans are skeptical; we've already done it before to get money. Ironically, Dlimi asked 'what do you mean by saying once again ?', then Dubail took the phone :
- We want to say that the parcel is here!
- What, the parcel?
- Yes, the package.
- Packed up ?
- Yes, packed up.
- That's good, we're coming».
The testimony of George Figon, published by L'Express on January the 10, 1966.
It was on January the 10th that a «fifteen pages documentary», containing George Figon's testimony was published on L'Express. «Our scoop is a big twisted story», said Jacques Derogy. New revelations were added to the investigation led by Judge Louis Zollinger, in addition to a denial issued by George Figon in which he denies his previous statement. On the 17th of January, 1966, Figon was shot dead in his Paris apartment on Rue des Renaudes. Media at the time pointed out at the weird way in which the man committed suicide including international magazines such as the Times and the Daily Mail.
On the same day, several prestigious personalities from political, cultural and scientific circles called for «shedding light on Mehdi Ben Barka's disappearance». They demanded that «the names of the ones responsible for what happened should be revealed».
«That's when Dlimi and Achachi got to the first floor. As soon as he saw Dlimi, Ben Barka was terrified, and stopped debating. We started by tying him using ropes that Palisse purchased. It is Dubail who tied down his feet. (...) At that moment, on the ground floor, comes Oufkir, wearing a big black felt hat.»
The testimony of George Figon, published by L'Express on January 10, 1966.
De Gaulle finally recognizes that the French were involved
On January the 22nd, Judge Zollinger issued three international arrest warrants against General Oufkir, Commander Dlimi and Larbi Chtouki who also took part in the kidnapping of Ben Barka. Two days later, L'Express published an 18 pages article devoted to the affair and divided it into five weekly series.
On the 21st of February, General de Gaulle finally commented on the Ben Barka affair in a press conference. It is only on September the 5th that the trial of the accuseds was opened in Paris to end on June 5th, 1967.
Antoine Lopez, Moroccan intelligence informant (SDCE), and Louis Souchon, one of the police officers who arrested Ben Barka, were sentenced to imprisonment. Others were acquitted while General Mohammed Oufkir, Ahmed Dlimi and five other French nationals on the run, were sentenced in absentia to life imprisonment.
Several versions of the story made it to the surface later on, suggesting that the Israeli Mossad was involved in getting rid of Ben Barka's body. No one knows till now the details of what exactly happened to Hassan II's biggest opponent.


Cliquez ici pour lire l'article depuis sa source.