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- THE WEEK, Page 18WORLDWe Are All Going to Die
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- Algeria's President is killed just after uttering those words
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- A few seconds after Mohammed Boudiaf spoke the words "We are
- all going to die," an assassin in uniform raised his submachine
- gun and fired, killing the 73-year-old Algerian head of state.
- Boudiaf may have thought he was merely making a philosophical
- point in his address to a crowd at a cultural center in the
- Mediterranean port city of Annaba. It was his first trip
- outside Algiers since he took office after a military coup in
- January. In the confusion and panic that followed, 41 other
- people were wounded by gunfire and grenades.
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- Though the government was reticent, the Algerian media
- reported that the killer was a member of the security service
- who acted out of "religious conviction." Suspicion fell
- naturally on the religious fundamentalists of the Islamic
- Salvation Front, whose electoral victory last January was
- aborted by a military coup. The Front was banned, and 10,000
- suspected fundamentalists were arrested. Since then, militant
- Muslims have killed as many as 100 soldiers and police officers.
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- In spite of the presumption that the fundamentalists were
- behind the killing, some Algerians speculated that factions
- inside the army could have been nervous about Boudiaf's
- announced intention to investigate and punish high-level
- corruption. Others thought members of the National Liberation
- Front, the socialist party overthrown by the army, might have
- ordered the assassination.
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- Ali Kafi, secretary-general of the organization of
- veterans of the war for independence from France, was appointed
- to replace Boudiaf as president of the five-member Supreme State
- Council. But the armed forces remain in charge, and Defense
- Minister Khaled Nezzar is really Algeria's top man.
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