24 profiles corresponding to your research |  |
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 14.09.2008 |  | Hocine «Adda» Mohamed was born 1966 in Algeria. He was first deputy of Mohamed Fergane, who was executive delegate ("délégué exécutif communal", [DEC]), and later mayor of Relizane. Fergane is mainly known for his leadership of an anti-terrorism militia, which is said to be responsible for over 200 cases of enforced disappearances in the province.
Hocine Mohamed was part of group of twelve militia members who were arrested by the Algerian auth... |
 14.09.2008 |  | Abdelkader Mohamed was born in 1961 in Algeria. He emigrated to France, where he became a citizen and lived near Nîmes until 1994, when his father asked him to return to Algeria to join a self-defense group of the province (wilaya) of Relizane. After he was arrested in March 1998 with a group of twelve militia members, amongst whom were also his father Abed and his brother Hocine (see "related cases"), he returned to France.
Since 1993/ 1994, ... |
 14.09.2008 |  | Kamana Claver was born in 1940 in Rwanda. He worked as a businessman in Rwanda and it is alleged that he was a local leader of the Interahamwe militia. This group had been involved in organising the 1994 massacre since 1990. Kamana is accused of having organised and participated in killings between April and July 1994. The alleged acts were committed in the town of Runda located in southern Rwanda. Kamana is alleged to have been a major instigato... |
 22.06.2008 |  | Wenceslas Munyeshyaka, a Rwandan citizen was former head of the Sainte-Famille parish in Kigali. Since 2001, he was a priest for the parishes of Gisors and the Epte Valley in France.
A legal enquiry was opened against Munyeshyaka in 1995 after a complaint was lodged, for “complicity in torture and inhumane or degrading treatment”. Witnesses gave account in precise detail of the massive executions which allegedly took place on the 17th and 22n... |
 15.04.2008 |  | General Norbert Dabira was Inspector-General of the Armed Forces and the Gendarmerie in 1999.
In the affair known as Brazzaville Beach (the name given to the river port of Brazzaville), the following facts were established according to Congolese courts. During the years 1998-1999, Brazzaville and its surroundings were prey to multiple conflicts which pitted the regular troops of the Congolese armed forces against politico-military groups known... |
 15.04.2008 |  | The english version of this profile will soon be accessible online. |
 25.03.2008 |  | Denis Sassou Nguesso was born in 1943 in Edou in the north of the country. After completing his secondary school studies in Loubomo, he joined the Army in 1960, just before the country was granted independence. In 1968, being a supporter of President Marien Ngouabi, he joined the ranks of the only party, the Congolese Workers Party (PCT). In 1975 he was appointed Minister of Defence. From 18 March to 2 April 1977, Denis Sassou Nguesso assured the... |
 10.03.2008 |  | Maurice Papon was appointed as general secretary for the prefecture of Gironde on 1 May 1942. The “Office of Jew Questions” was among his responsibilities. He carried out this function until August 1944, when he was transferred to the French Home Office.
Ten convoys left Bordeaux for Drancy between June 1942 and August 1944. They were composed of Jewish people who would later be deported to Auschwitz. Some of these convoys were the result of ... |
 21.02.2008 |  | The english version of this profile will soon be accessible online. |
 12.09.2007 |  | The english version of this profile will soon be accessible online. |
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