Ben Arafa was placed on the Alouite throne on 21 August 1953 after his cousin Mohammed V was deposed, by the French authorities, which maintained a
protectorate in Morocco under the 1912
Treaty of Fez. General
Augustin Guillaume, who had been
resident-general of Morocco since 1951, had clashed with Mohammed V because of the latter's support for the Moroccan independence movement and led a campaign to overthrow him, which was supported by the French colonists and some Moroccan leaders, such as Thami El Glaoui the Pasha of
Marrakesh. Eventually, the sultan was arrested, loaded onto an aeroplane and sent into exile - first in
Corsica, and later in
French Madagascar. Despite Mohammed V's refusal to abdicate, the
Ulama of Fez recognised Ben Arafa as his successor. His short reign was marked by increasing violence from the nationalists who refused to recognise him as sultan. Less than a month into his reign, on 11 September 1953, he narrowly survived an assassination attempt by
Allal ben Abdallah. His power was limited by the authority of the resident-general (General Guillaume until 1954 and then
Francis Lacoste) and the influence of the Pasha of Marrakesh, but also by the radicalisation of the French colonists who founded the 'Présence française' party. Because of Ben Arafa's lack of legitimacy or popularity with the Moroccan population, as well as the increasing links of the violence in Morocco with that in
Tunisia and with the
Algerian War, led the French authorities to consider deposing him and restoring Mohammed V in 1955.
Gilbert Grandval, who had been named as the new resident-general, decided to meet with Grand Vizir
Muhammad al-Muqri. Al-Muqri flew to France and met with Grandval at
Vichy and intimated that Ben Arafa needed to leave, in light of popular agitation throughout the country, and it was envisioned that Mohammed V would be restored to power. On 1 October, Ben Arafa abdicated. Mohammed V's triumphant return to Morocco on 16 November 1955, after the Accords of
La Celle-Saint-Cloud, marked the end of Ben Arafa's short reign and the restoration of full sovereignty to Morocco, which was completed in 1956 with the end of the French and
Spanish protectorates. == Exile and death ==