Ahmed Boukhari
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Ahmed Boukhari | |
|---|---|
أحمد البوخاري | |
![]() Boukhari pictured in Casablanca in 2004 | |
| Born | 1938 |
| Died | (aged 86) Casablanca, Morocco |
| Occupations | Author, secret agent |
| Employer | leader Cab-1 of DST (formerly) |
| Known for | was One of the last surviving possible witnesses of the Benbarka Affair |
Ahmed al-Boukhari (Arabic: أحمد البوخاري; 1938 – 16 February 2025) was a Moroccan agent of Cab-1, the political cell of the DST (the Moroccan internal secret service). He claimed to have taken part in the operation that orchestrated the abduction and murder of Mehdi Ben Barka, and was as such one of the last surviving possible witnesses in the Benbarka Affair.[1]
Although he was not present at the crime scene, he had to process all the information on the operation. He claimed that CIA agents were involved, a certain Colonel Martin. Boukhari claimed in his confessions that Ben Barka's body was transported secretly to Morocco and his corpse was dissolved in a bath of acid. However, pro-government newspapers in Morocco claimed that Boukhari was a fraud and a liar. The movie "J'ai vu tuer Ben Barka" ("I saw Ben Barka being killed") was based partly on this book.
