Benyoucef Ben Khedda, Algerian independence leader (born Feb. 23, 1920, Berrouaghia, Alg.—died Feb. 4, 2003, Algiers, Alg.), negotiated Algeria’s independence from France in 1962, but he was forced from power shortly thereafter.
In 1943, after he protested against French attempts to recruit Algerians in World War II, Ben Khedda was imprisoned for eight months. After the war he became general secretary of the pro-independence organisation headed by Messali Hadj, but he later broke with the party and started his own organisation.
After the radical National Liberation Front (FLN) launched a revolt against French rule in 1954 and France responded with mass arrests, Ben Khedda wrote in a partisan newspaper decrying the French policy. Again he was imprisoned, and on his release he joined the FLN. He joined the provisional government that the FLN set up in Tunisia, and in 1961 he replaced Ferhat Abbas as head of the provisional government.
A settlement was reached whereby a referendum was held in July 1962, followed by the departure of the French and the triumphant arrival in Algiers of the provisional government. Within weeks, however, Houari Boumediene and Ahmed Ben Bella challenged Ben Khedda for the leadership of the government, and he stepped down.
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