Méhariste

French Foreign Legionaire of the Compagnies Sahariennes.

Méhariste is a French word that roughly translates to camel cavalry. The word is most commonly used as a designation of military units.

Origins of French Camel Corps

France created a méhariste camel corps as part of the Armée d'Afrique in the Sahara in 1902, replacing regular units of Algerian spahis and tirailleurs earlier used to patrol the desert boundaries. The newly raised Compagnies Méharistes were originally recruited mainly from the Chaamba nomadic tribe and commanded by officers of the French Affaires Indigènes (Native Affairs Bureau). Each company of Méharistes comprised six officers, 36 French non-commissioned officers and troopers, and 300 Chaamba troopers. Their bases were at Tabelbala, Adrar, Ouargla, Fort Polignac and Tamanrasset.

History

With their local tribal links plus mobility and flexible tactics, the Compagnies Méharistes provided an effective means of policing the desert. A similar camel corps was subsequently raised to cover the southern Sahara, operating from French West Africa and falling within the Armee Coloniale. From the 1930s onwards the Méharistes formed part of the Compagnies Sahariennes which also included motorised French and (from 1940) Foreign Legion units. Following the establishment of a French Mandate over Syria in 1920, three méhariste companies were organised in that country as part of the French Army of the Levant.

During World War II méhariste companies organised as "nomad groups" saw service against Axis forces in the Fezzan and southern Tunisia. At the end of the war the Compagnies Sahariennes resumed their role as desert police. Operating in wide-ranging platoons of 50 to 60 men under French officers, they administered local laws, provided some basic medical assistance, inspected wells and reported on the state of pastures in the fertile oasis areas.[1]

The Sahara remained relatively quiet during the Algerian War of Independence (1954–62) but there was one instance, on 17 October 1957, where 60 méharistes of the Adrar camel company near Timimoun mutinied and killed their eight French officers and N.C.O.s. According to differing reports the mutineers either were able to join the rebel ALN or were caught in the open desert by French fighter aircraft and destroyed. During the later stages of the Algerian War Méhariste detachments did patrol the southern (Saharan) ends of the fortified Morice Line along the Tunisian border. On several occasions the ALN attempted to outflank the Line by disguising commando units as Méharistes.[2]

The camel-mounted units were retained in service until the end of French rule in 1962. The locally recruited méharistes were then disbanded while French personnel were transferred to other units.

Spanish and Italian Camel Corps

Locally recruited camel corps were also maintained by the Spanish and Italian armies in their respective North African territories (Spanish Sahara plus Cyrenaica and Tripolitania) during the colonial period. Both the Spanish Tropas Nomadas and the Italian Zaptie Meharista served primarily as desert gendarmerie. Like their French counterparts they were recruited from the indigenous desert tribes and wore modified versions of tribal dress.

Post-independence

The modern Algerian army maintains up to twelve companies of desert troops in the Sahara but these are mechanized units. In 1996 the government of Mali reestablished a camel corps of six companies for patrol and policing work along its Saharan border. However the Tuareg rising of 2012 and subsequent disturbances led to widespread losses and desertions amongst the méharistes. As of 2013 only 368 méharistes remained in service and the future of the corps was in doubt.[3]

Uniform

The Compagnies Méharistes wore flowing coats (gandourah) of either white for Arab or blue for Tuareg troopers, with turbans, veils and wide black trousers (seroual). Two red sashes were worn – one wound around the waist and the other crossed on the chest under red-brown leather equipment of traditional Saharean pattern. A khaki field dress of similar cut was also worn.

French personnel wore light blue kepis. All ranks were normally bare-footed when in the saddle, in order not to harm the sensitive upper body of their camels. The saddlery and other leather equipment was of local design and often elaborately decorated.

See also

References

  1. John Gunther, page 142 "Inside Africa", Hamish Hamilton London 1955
  2. Horne, Alistair. A Savage War of Peace. p. 265. ISBN 0-670-61964-7.
  3. L' Essor 16 September 2013
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