Mehdi Ben Barka (born 1920 –
disappeared October 29,
1965) (المهدي بن بركة) was a
Moroccan politician, head of the left-wing
National Union of Popular Forces (UNPF) and secretary of the
Tricontinental Conference. An opponent of
Hassan II, he "
disappeared" in Paris in 1965. As of 2008, the Ben Barka Affair has not been completely clarified, and investigations are on-going.
Background
Ben Barka was born in Rabat, Morocco to a civil servant, and became the first Moroccan Muslim to get a degree in mathematics in an official French school in 1950. He became a prominent member of the Moroccan opposition in the nationalist Istiqlal party, but broke off after clashes with conservative opponents in 1959 to found the left-wing National Union of Popular Forces (UNFP).
In 1962, Ben Barka was accused of plotting against King Hassan II and exiled from Morocco, after supporting Algeria in 1963.
On October 29, 1965 Mehdi Ben Barka was abducted ("disappeared") in Paris by French police officers and never seen again. On Dec. 29, 1975, Time Magazine published an article called "The Murder of Mehdi Ben Barka", stating that three Moroccan agents were responsible for the death of Ben Barka, one of them former Interior Minister Mohammed Oufkir. Speculation persists as to CIA involvement. French intelligence agents and the Israeli Mossad were also involved, according to the Time magazine article.
The exile and global political significance
Ben Barka was exiled in 1963, becoming a “travelling salesman of the revolution”, according to the historian
Jean Lacouture. He left initially for
Algiers, where he met
Che Guevara,
Amilcar Cabral and
Malcolm X. From there, he went to
Cairo,
Rome,
Geneva and
Havana, trying to unite the revolutionary movements of the Third World for the Tricontinental Conference held in January 1966 in Havana, where he affirmed in a press conference, “the two currents of the world revolution will be represented there: the current emerged with the
October Revolution and that of the national liberation revolution”.
As the leader of the Tricontinental Conference, Ben Barka was a major figure in the Third World movement and supported revolutionary anti-colonial action in various states, provoking the anger of the United States and France. Just before his death, he was preparing the first meeting of the Tricontinental, scheduled to take place in Havana, Cuba - the OSPAAAL (Spanish for "Organization for Solidarity with the People of Africa, Asia and Latin America") was founded on this occasion.
Chairing the preparatory commission, he defined the objectives; assistance with the movements of liberation, support for Cuba subjected to the United States embargo, the liquidation of the foreign military bases and apartheid in South Africa. For the historian René Galissot, “it is in this revolutionary dash of Tricontinentale that the major cause of the removal and the assassination of Ben Barka was”.
Ben Barka remains a revered figure in the Moroccan left-wing opposition, and as the exact circumstances of his disappearance and presumed death remain unknown, is still a subject of heated debate.
Theories on the disappearance of Ben Barka
French trial
In a 1967
trial in France, two French officers were sent to prison for their role in the kidnapping. However, the judge ruled that the main guilty party was Moroccan
interior minister Mohamed Oufkir.
Georges Figon, a witness with a criminal background who had testified earlier that Oufkir stabbed Ben Barka to death, was later found dead, officially a
suicide.
Prefect of Police
Maurice Papon (1910-2007), later convicted for crimes against humanity for his role under Vichy, was forced to resign following Ben Barka's kidnapping.
Ahmed Boukhari
A former member of the Moroccan
secret service,
Ahmed Boukhari claimed in 2001 that Ben Barka had died during interrogation in a
villa south of Paris. He said Ben Barka's body was then taken back to Morocco and destroyed in a vat of
acid. Furthermore, he declared that this vat of acid, whose plans were reproduced by the newspapers, had been constructed under instructions from the CIA agent "
Colonel Martin", who had learnt this technique to make corpses disappear during his appointment in the
Shah's Iran in the 1950s. Henceforth, a pattern of "disappearances", starting from Iran, passing by Morocco in the 1960-70s, and continuing on into
South America's
dirty wars during the 1970s-80s was discovered. (See link below)
Ali Bourequat
Moroccan-French
dissident and former
Tazmamart prisoner of conscience Ali Bourequat claims in his book,
In the Moroccan King's Secret Garden, to have met a former Moroccan secret agent in a prison near
Rabat in 1973-74. The man, Dubail, recounted how he and some colleagues, led by
Colonel Oufkir and
Ahmed Dlimi, had
murdered Ben Barka in Paris.
The body was then encapsulated in cement and buried outside Paris, but his head brought by Oufkir to Morocco in a suitcase. Thereafter, it was buried on the very same prison grounds where Dubail and Bourequat were held.
CIA documents
In 1976, the United States government, due to requests made through the
Freedom of Information Act, acknowledged that the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) was in possession of some 1,800 documents involving Ben Barka, but the documents were not released.
French documents
Some secret French documents on the affair were made public in 2001, causing political uproar.
Defence minister Michèle Alliot-Marie had agreed in 2004 to follow the recommendations of a national defence committee and release the 73 additional classified documents on the case. However, the son of Mehdi Ben Barka was outraged at what he called a "pseudo-release of files", insisting that information had been withheld which could have implicated the
French secret services (SDECE), and possibly the
CIA and the
Mossad, as well as the ultimate responsibility of king
Hassan II, who conveniently was able to put the blame on Oufkir after his failed coup in 1972.
Affaire Ben Barka : Driss Basri chez le juge,
Le Figaro, 23 May 2006 .
Driss Basri
Driss Basri, Interior Minister of Hassan II and his right-hand man from the early 1980s to the late 1990s, was heard by the judge Patrick Ramaël in May 2006, as a witness, concerning Ben Barka's kidnapping. Basri declared to the magistrate that he had not been linked to the Ben Barka Affair. He added that "it is possible that the King knew. It is legitimate to think that de Gaulle possessed some information..."
References
Bibliography
Filmography
- I saw Ben Barka get killed (2005) by Serge Le Péron

- Ben Barka - The Moroccan Equation (2002) by Simone Bitton

See also
External links