A RETIRED TORTURER REVEALS FRANCES CRIMES
PARIS - Justice is closing in on at least some of those who committed crimes against humanity.
A Belgian court recently convicted four Rwandan Hutus of genocide. Also in Belgium, Israels prime minister, Ariel Sharon, is being charged with crimes against humanity by survivors of the 1982 massacre of a thousand Palestinian civilians in Beirut. Last week, Serb despot Slobodan Milosevic was handed over to the UN War Crimes Tribunal in the Hague; more senior Serb war criminals are likely to follow.
The most interesting current case, however, is here in France, where an 83-year old retired general, Paul Aussaresses, has publicly admitted, even boasted, that he supervised torture, summary executions, and assassinations during the bloody 1954-1962 Algerian war of independence.
In his book, Special Services: Algeria 1955-1957, Aussaresses blows the lid off one of Frances best-kept secrets, and its darkest hours; its brutal, often criminal, repression of Algerians fighters and civilians seeking independence from French colonial rule.
This subject has particular poignancy for me. As a 17-year old student in Europe, I organized and led demonstrations supporting Algerian independence. My life was repeatedly threatened by a shadowy group of killers known as the Red Hand, who, it was later revealed, were barbouzes, or deep-cover agents of SDECE, Frances ruthless intelligence service.
The book has ignited a firestorm in France, and produced demands by rights groups the general to be charged with crimes against humanity. Prime Minister Lionel Jospin, sounding very much like Claude Raines in Casablanca, said he was shocked and revolted. President Jacques Chirac called the book shameful, demanding the general be stripped of his rank and medals. Both leaders and most French over the age of 50 are perfectly well aware of what occurred in Algeria. Frances establishment wants Aussaresses punished for bringing embarrassing attention to a dreadful era France has covered up or forgotten not for his actual crimes.
The Algerian uprising was marked by terrorist attacks (in todays media usage) against French settlers and pro-French Algerians, and guerilla warfare between 400,000 French colonial troops and fighters of the National Liberation Front (FLN). The current Palestinian intidafa against Israeli rule resembles in some ways the 1950s Algerian struggle.
As the uprising spread to major cities, Frances socialist government ordered the army to use all means to crush the rebels. Concentration camps were established across Algeria. Borders were sealed with minefields and electrified wire. SDECE was ordered to identify and destroy the FLNs leadership. Aussaresses, then a senior officer of SDECEs action service, a top-secret unit used for assassinations and sabotage, headed the campaign to liquidate FLN chiefs.
Aussaresses admits he and his team of specialists conducted one of the wars most notorious crimes: the 1955 mass slaughter of Algerian suspects in revenge for attacks on French settlers. Action service ran a secret torture center at the Villa les Tourelles in Algiers where Aussaresses personally supervised interrogations. Thousands of Algerians were subjected to la ggne, intense electric current delivered to genitals, ears, and lips, savage beatings, near-drowning in filthy water, and mock executions. Few suspects ever emerged alive.
The struggle for Algeria climaxed in the epic, 1957 Battle of Algiers. Paris ordered General Jacques Massus elite 10th Paratroop Division to rake over the FLNs strongholds in the Kasbah. Using hooded informers, torture, and assassinations, Aussaressess men and Massus tough paras destroyed the FLN Algiers network.
Aussaresses captured the leader of the FLN, Larbi Ben MHidi, and murdered him. He also killed another senior FLN chief, Ali Boumandjel. Both deaths were recorded as suicides. Aussaresses, who boasts of killing 24 prisoners with his own hand, recently admitted we were a death squad. Another senior French para officer boasted, we make the Gestapo and SS look like children. .
Between 500,000 and 1 million Algerians were killed in the eight year uprising.. Thousands were tortured, including anti-war Frenchmen. Mass graves of executed prisoners are still being discovered in Algeria. Yet, not one senior French official ever was charged with these crimes.
The biggest uproar in France was not caused by Aussaresses admission of atrocities, but his charges that these crimes were approved by the socialist government of Guy Mollet, its Justice Minister, Francois Mitterand, and by judges, politicians, policemen and bureaucrats Frances ruling establishment. These accusations come just as Lionel Jospins ruling socialists face elections
Jospins government, a self-professed champion of human rights, rejects any responsibility for French crimes in Algeria, and refuses to pay compensation to victims. Yet France sentenced Lyons Gestapo chief Klaus Barbie to life for torture and executions of Resistance fighters the same crimes committed by Aussaresses. France recently jailed a senior Vichy official for deportation of Jews, condemned Turkey over the 1915 Armenian massacres and called for the trial of Chiles Gen. Pinochet.
Only the communist party is demanding a full judicial investigation. Meanwhile, Aussaresses continues to proudly boast of his exploits. He defends assassinations, mass executions, and torture as necessary to combat terrorism., The general calls himself a patriot and says he would do it all again.
Similar arguments are heard today from Israel and, ironically, from Algerias own repressive, French-backed military regime which is trying to crush Islamic rebels with the same ruthless ferocity shown by the colonial French.
Aussaresses is a self-confessed war criminal who should be brought to trial. His book has served a valuable purpose in revealing Frances hypocrisy and forcing it to face its brutal colonial past. If Germany must pay for its past crimes, why not France?