Creation of the Autonomous Zone of Algiers , political and financial leader and member of the CCE during the early phase of the
Battle of Algiers. , in charge of liaison and chief of staff during the early phase of the
Battle of Algiers. , responsible for armed action during the early phase of the
Battle of Algiers. in the upper
Casbah, where the first meeting of the
CCE took place and which also served as a hideout for
Ali la Pointe before it was destroyed by the
1st REP on 8 October 1957. Newly elected at the Soummam Congress, members of the
Committee of Coordination and Execution (CCE) met clandestinely — after an initial meeting at the house of Nassima Hablal — at the house of
Yacef Saâdi in the upper Casbah:
Abane Ramdane,
Larbi Ben M'hidi,
Krim Belkacem,
Saâd Dahlab and
Benyoucef Benkhedda — the effective leaders of the revolution — decided to base their seat in the
Casbah of Algiers where they expected better control over FLN militants, superior lines of liaison and, above all, because they believed the capital favoured total clandestinity with its many safe houses, network of couriers and protections. Sitting in Algiers also meant being at the heart of Algeria and being in a position to deploy urban guerrilla tactics, which they considered as important as fighting in the rural maquis. The five men divided responsibilities as follows: Benkhedda took charge of contacts with Europeans and the management of the new Autonomous Zone of Algiers (now detached from
Wilaya IV); Dahlab took propaganda and the direction of the newspaper
El Moudjahid; Ben M’hidi became responsible for armed action in Algiers (and thus was the direct superior of
Yacef Saâdi); Krim Belkacem assumed liaison with the different wilayas, making him the chief of staff and the strategist for the armed struggle; finally, Abane Ramdane became political and financial head — effectively number one despite the collegial intent of the “five”. When the CCE left Algiers on 25 February 1957, shortly after the arrest of Ben M'hidi, it delegated its powers over the ZAA to Abdelmalek Temmam, a substitute member of the
CNRA. After Temmam’s arrest in 1957, Yacef Saâdi took charge of what remained of the organisation, severely weakened by repeated assaults from General
Jacques Massu’s parachute division and thus accumulated leadership of both the political and military branches. Yacef was later betrayed by the “bleus” of the
Intelligence and Operations Group (GRE) under Captain
Paul-Alain Léger; in particular Hacène Ghendriche (known as Zerrouk), who collaborated in the capture of the ZAA leader on 24 September 1957. The last surviving top leader,
Ali la Pointe, assumed command for only two weeks before being located in Rue des Abderames in the
Casbah of Algiers and dying with comrades
Hassiba Ben Bouali and the 12-year-old child « Petit Omar » when the house was blown up by the
1st REP on 8 October 1957. The first phase of the
Battle of Algiers thus ended, as did the first chapter in the history of the ZAA. At the end of 1958, Larbi Alilat (alias Abdelhatif), together with Belkacem Betouche, discreetly formed a network linked with
Wilaya IV. The zone was reconstituted by Commander Azzedine on 14 May 1962; he brought militants from the FLN Federation in France to help dismantle the
OAS. The ZAA was independent of Wilayas III and IV. Commander Azzedine was reported to have frequent contacts with the prefect of Algiers, Vitalis Cros, and with Michel Hacq, one of the two heads of the French “Mission C” (named from December 1961), the official French organisation fighting the OAS, which from January 1962 handed over lists of OAS activists compiled by the French mission. Azzedine organised kidnappings of Europeans in April–May 1962 in greater Algiers and ordered executions in May, prompting the French government to put mild pressure on the head of the provisional executive, Abderrahmane Farès, to have Azzedine stopped or apprehended.
Summer crisis of 1962 In Algiers,
Yacef Saâdi, who had retaken leadership of the ZAA during the summer of 1962 after his release from French prisons, formed some 4,000 armed men. He rallied with all weapons to the “
Oujda clan” and opposed
Wilaya IV, which remained loyal to GPRA men who had taken control of the capital. Yacef seized the radio, the port and many administrations and refused to recognise
Ahmed Ben Bella. Violent clashes took place in the
Casbah of Algiers between ZAA units and forces from Wilaya IV; there were dead and wounded, including many civilians. The people of Algiers took to the streets to demand peace, shouting: “**Sebaa Snine Barakat!**” — “Seven years, enough!” , political-military head of the Autonomous Zone of Algiers (ZAA) and emblematic figure of the
Battle of Algiers. , politico-military head of the ZAA. == Organisation ==