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Djamila Bouazza (Arabic: جميلة بوعزة; 1938–2015), also spelled Jamila Bouaza, was an Algerian militant who supported Algerian nationalism, opposing French colonial rule. She is remembered for planting a bomb in April 1957 on the terrace of the Coq Hardi café in Algiers, killing four people and injuring many more. She was initially sentenced to death by a French military court but was finally released in 1962 under the Évian Accords.[1][2][3]
^"Décès de Djamila Bouazza, l'un des symboles de la Révolution Algérienne" (in French). Radio Algérienne. 14 June 2015. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
^Zineb, Abbès (12 June 2015). "La grande moudjahida Djamila Bouazza n'est plus" (in French). Algérie1.com. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
^"ALGERIA: Tac-Tac-Tac". Time. 17 March 1958. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
DjamilaBouazza (Arabic: جميلة بوعزة; 1938–2015), also spelled Jamila Bouaza, was an Algerian militant who supported Algerian nationalism, opposing French...
tried for allegedly bombing a cafe, alongside another Algerian rebel, DjamilaBouazza, aged 19. The bomb killed 11 civilians inside. At the time the French...
beginning of the “Battle of Algiers”. These three women were, along with DjamilaBouazza, the ones who planted a bomb on 26 January 1957 at the Coq Hardi brewery...
Forces of Algiers on 7 December 1957, at the same time as Djamila Bouhired, DjamilaBouazza and Abdelghani Marsali. He was executed on 24 April 1958,...
women, together with for example the three Djamilas (Djamila Bouhired(again), DjamilaBouazza and Djamila Boupacha) became important figures to resort...