Mohamed Boudia

Mohamed Boudia (24 February 1932[1] – 28 June 1973) was an Algerian poet and member of Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP). He was assassinated in a terrorist attack in Paris by a car bomb placed under his seat. His assassination was carried out by Mossad agents as part of the Operation Wrath of God. At the time of his assassination, Boudia was the Chief of PFLP operations in Europe.[2] Boudia was replaced by Carlos the Jackal.[3]

Mohamed Boudia

Boudia had been a participant in the Algerian War, during which he had been jailed for an attack on a petrol depot in southern France. The end of the war and Algerian independence in 1962 led to his release, having spent three years in prison. Boudia was a playwright,[4] and after independence became director of Algeria's national theatre. He fled to France after Houari Boumediène seized power in June 1965. He ran a theatre in Paris, whilst beginning to work with figures such as Carlos the Jackal.[5]

References

  1. Achour Cheurfi (2004), Écrivains algériens: dictionnaire biographique, Casbah éditions
  2. Stephen E. Atkins (2004), Encyclopedia of modern worldwide extremists and extremist groups, Greenwood Publishing Group. p288
  3. Audrey Kurth Cronin (2009), How terrorism ends: understanding the decline and demise of terrorist campaigns, Princeton University Press, p26
  4. "Terror, and a Frail Hint of Peace". Time. 16 July 1973. Retrieved 2 October 2013.
  5. John Follain (1998), Jackal: the complete story of the legendary terrorist, Carlos the Jackal, Arcade Publishing, pp30-31


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