Gilles Cistac
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Gilles Cistac (November 11, 1961 − March 3, 2015) was a French-Mozambican lawyer specialised in constitutional law. He was shot and killed and political motives were suspected. The RENAMO party organised protests.
Move to Mozambique
Gilles Cistac was born in 1961 in the French city of Toulouse. He studied public law in Toulouse and graduated there in 1998.[1]
In 1993 Cistac came as an advisor to Mozambique working for the French embassy providing assistance to the Mozambican state in creating a new electoral law. After a short stay back in France, he moved to Mozambique in 1995. Since then he worked as a law professor at Eduardo Mondlane University. Until his death, he was the vice-chair of the investigation department of the law faculty of the university.[2] It was his efforts that led to the creation of the Centro de Estudos sobre a Integração Regional (CEDIR), a small investigation unit working on the harmonisation of the law in the SADC member states.[2]
In 2009, Cistac received the French order of merit Ordre des Palmes Académiques in the rank of a knight (Chevalier) for his work on decentralisation in Mozambique.[3] The "Ordre des Palmes Académiques" is the highest French order of merit in the science area. In 2010 Cistac acquired Mozambican citizenship in addition to his French citizenship.[4]

Death
In the morning of the March 3, 2015 Gilles Cistac wanted to enter a taxi in front of a café in the Polana neighbourhood, when a car passed by and Cistac was hit by three shots.[5] A few hours later, Cistac died in Maputo's central hospital. The main opposition party, RENAMO, as well as certain oppositional and international media houses blamed radical forces of the ruling FRELIMO party for Cistac's death, while the FRELIMO denied having any relation to this.[6] A few days later, several marches in several Mozambican cities honoured Cistac.[7] Embassies of different states, as of France, the European Union and the United States, condemned the homicide and demanded a fast and effective investigation of it.[8][9][10]
Cistac's homicide was seen as a further step in increasing Mozambique's political crisis since 2013.[11][12][13]