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Rachid Ammar

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Name
  
Rachid Ammar


Rachid Ammar nimgsulekhacomothersoriginal700rachidammar2

Born
  
1947 or 1948

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Rachid Ammar, or Rchid Ammar (Arabic: رشيد عمار‎‎)(born 1947 or 1948) was the chief of staff of the Tunisian Armed Forces.

Contents

Rachid Ammar Tunisia39s army chief Rachid Ammar retires amid criticism

Biography

Rachid Ammar Rachid Ammar Photos Demonstrations Continue In Tunisia

Born in either 1947 or 1948, Ammar is from Sayada, a small town on the coast of Tunisia.

Rachid Ammar Hamma Hammami n39exclut pas le retour de Rachid Ammar

Ammar was promoted to chief of staff from the rank of colonel when the chief of staff, Abdelaziz Skik, was killed in a 2002 helicopter crash, which is considered mysterious by several soldiers and journalists who have also hold Ben Ali's government responsible. The same helicopter crash also killed five colonels, four majors and two lieutenants.(one casualty was the Military Security Service leader colonel El Arbi Ghazali).

Rachid Ammar RachidAmmar1jpg

Ammar was a member of the joint chiefs of staff and was received along with other members of the council by Ali at a ceremony during the summer of 2010. There, Ammar was promoted by Ben Ali from the rank of divisional general to that of corps general.

Rachid Ammar Rachid Ammar Photos Demonstrations Continue In Tunisia

On 25 June 2013, Ammar announced his retirement due to harsh criticisms.

Tunisian revolution

On 13 January 2011, Ammar refused to follow the orders of Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, then president of Tunisia, to shoot protesters participating in the 2010–2011 Tunisian protests. He responded to the Presidential order with, "Agree to deploy soldiers to calm the situation, but the army does not shoot the people."

Ben Ali then sacked Ammar for not obeying his order and put him under house arrest. On 14 January, Ben Ali fled Tunisia and Ammar was reinstated by Mohamed Ghannouchi. On 15 January, The Economist Online reported that the Tunisian military was being led by Ammar. The New York Times reported there was speculation that Ammar would take over the country and become president. The Egyptian newspaper Almasry Alyoum reported that the embassy of the United States had told Ammar to take control of Tunisia if the country became politically unstable.

References

Rachid Ammar Wikipedia