Ali Ammar

Ali Ammar
Born 14 May 1930(1930-05-14)
Miliana, French Algeria
(now Algeria)
Died 9 October 1957(1957-10-09) (aged 27)
Casbah, Algiers, French Algeria
(now Algeria)
Cause of death The French Army bombed and destroyed the house (in the Casbah) Ali La Pointe was living in, after refusing to surrender. He died instantly from the sustained injuries from the explosion.
Other names Ali La Pointe
Occupation Boxer, Freedom Fighter, Laborer, Bricklayer
Organization Armée de Libération Nationale (ALN)
Known for Battle of Algiers
Political movement Front de Libération Nationale (FLN)
Religion Sunni Islam

Ali Ammar (Arabic: علي عمار‎),(14 May 1930 – 8 October 1957), also known as Ali La Pointe, was a guerrilla leader who fought for Algerian independence against the French. In the film, The Battle of Algiers, he was portrayed by Brahim Haggiag.

Ammar lived a life of petty crime and was serving a two-year prison sentence when war broke out in Algeria in 1954. Recruited in the notorious Barberousse prison by FLN militants, he became one of the FLN's most trusted and loyal lieutenants in Algiers. On December 28, 1956, he assassinated the Mayor of Algiers, Amedee Froger.

Late in 1957 the FLN leadership had been systematically isolated and eliminated by French paratroopers led by Colonel Yves Godard using interrogation with torture. Saadi Yacef ordered the leadership to hide in separate addresses within the Casbah; Yacef was captured on September 24. Ali la Pointe and three companions, Hassiba Ben Bouali, 'Hamid' Bouhamidi and 'le petit Omar', held out in hiding until 8 October. Tracked down by paras acting on a tip-off from an informer, Ali La Pointe was given the chance to surrender but refused, whereupon he, his companions, and the house in which he was hiding were bombed by French paratroopers. In all, 20 Algerians were killed in the blast.[1]

References

  1. ^ (in French) Universite Hassiba Ben Bouali, archived from the original on 20 February 2008, http://web.archive.org/web/20080220080609/http://www.univ-chlef.dz/present5.htm, retrieved 2 February 2011