After the coup d'état of June 19, 1965, he returned to the opposition. Accused of having organized an attack against Boumediene in April 1967, manipulated and betrayed by part of his entourage, he was sentenced to death in absentia. According to his daughter Karima, in an interview with
El Moudjahid on March 25, 1998, Belkacem definitively gave up politics and went into exile in August 1967: "On August 4, 1967," she says, "he and the family hastily packed some effects into the family
Volkswagen and drove all night to
Morocco. The next day, he was sentenced
in absentia." On October 17, 1967, he created with friends including
Slimane Amirat, Colonels
Amar Ouamrane and
Mohand Oulhadj, the Movement for the Defense of the Algerian Revolution (MDRA), an underground party intended to fight against the Boumediene regime. Two years later, on October 18, 1970, he was found strangled with his tie in a room at the Inter-Continental Hotel in
Frankfurt, presumably by
Algerian military security agents. == See also ==