Georges Figon

Georges-Auguste Figon (21 October 1926 – 17 January 1966)[1] was a French chemist who was a freelance barbouze (secret agent).[2] He arranged the meeting with Mehdi Ben Barka in the Brasserie Lipp in Paris. He later told L'Express that he knew who killed Barka and accused General Oufkir, whom Figon had seen torturing Barka.[3]

On 17 January 1966, before the second trial, Figon was found shot dead in his Paris apartment on Rue des Renaudes. Official records ruled death by suicide. In The Great Heroin Coup by Henrik Kruger, the author claims that Christian David shot and killed Figon.

His involvement in the kidnapping of Mehdi Ben Barka is the plot of the movie J'ai vu tuer Ben Barka (2005).

gollark: I think my suggested things would be more actually-useful to people.
gollark: <@241757436720054273> I guess Scratch may teach that a bit (though often you'll just be made to blindly follow a tutorial for "learn to code" stuff) but it doesn't teach it very *well* because it's generally lacking in useful constructs.
gollark: I always am except when I'm.not.
gollark: https://osmarks.tk/nemc ←TL;DR: scratch bad.
gollark: CF? Coefficient fluctuation?

References

  1. Faligot, Roger; Krop, Pascal (1985). La piscine: les services secrets français, 1944-1984 (in French). Éditions du Seuil. ISBN 9782020087438. Figon Georges-Auguste, né le 21 octobre 1926 à Paris (14e), Français, chimiste
  2. "France: L'Affaire Ben Barka". Time. 28 January 1966.
  3. "Chronologie de l'affaire Ben Barka". L'Express (in French). 12 October 2009.



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