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Hamida Djandoubi

Tunisian murderer (1949–1977) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hamida Djandoubi
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Hamida Djandoubi (Arabic: حميدة جندوبي, romanized: Ḥamīda Jandūbī; 22 September 1949 – 10 September 1977) was a Tunisian criminal who was executed by guillotine in France[1] after having been convicted of the kidnapping, torture and murder of Élisabeth Bousquet, a 21-year-old woman that he had forced into prostitution. Djandoubi was the last person to be lawfully executed by beheading anywhere in the Western world.

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Early life

Born in Tunisia on 22 September 1949, Djandoubi started living in Marseille in 1968, where he worked in a grocery store. He later worked as a landscaper but had a workplace accident in 1971: his leg got caught in the tracks of a tractor, resulting in the loss of two-thirds of his right leg.[2]

Allegation of forced prostitution

In 1973, a 21-year-old woman named Élisabeth Bousquet, whom Djandoubi had met in the hospital while recovering from his amputation, filed a complaint against him, stating that he had tried to force her into prostitution.[2]

Murder of Élisabeth Bousquet

After his arrest and eventual release from custody during the spring of 1973, Djandoubi drew two other young girls into his confidence and then forced them into prostitution for him.[3] On 3 July 1974, he kidnapped Bousquet and took her into his home where, in full view of the terrified girls, he beat the woman before stubbing a lit cigarette all over her breasts and genital area. Bousquet survived the ordeal so he took her by car to the outskirts of Marseille and strangled her there.[4][5]

On his return, Djandoubi warned the two girls to say nothing of what they had seen.[4] Bousquet's body was discovered in a shed by a boy on 7 July 1974. One month later, Djandoubi kidnapped another girl who managed to escape and report him to police.[6]

Trial and execution

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After a lengthy pre-trial process, Djandoubi eventually appeared in court in Aix-en-Provence on charges of torture-murder, rape, and premeditated violence on 24 February 1977. His main defence revolved around the supposed effects of the loss of his leg six years earlier, which his lawyer claimed had driven him to a paroxysm of alcohol abuse and violence that had turned him into "a different man".

On 25 February, he was sentenced to death. An appeal was rejected on 9 June. On 10 September 1977, Djandoubi was informed early in the morning that, as in the child murderers cases of Christian Ranucci (executed on 28 July 1976) and Jérôme Carrein (executed on 23 June 1977), he had not received a reprieve from President Valéry Giscard d'Estaing. Shortly afterwards, at 4:40 a.m., Djandoubi was executed by guillotine at Baumettes Prison in Marseille. Marcel Chevalier served as chief executioner.[7]

While Djandoubi was the last person executed in France, he was not the last condemned.[8] Fifteen defendants were sentenced to die before capital punishment was abolished in France on 9 October 1981 following the election of François Mitterrand, and those previously sentenced had their sentences commuted.[9] Djandoubi's death was the last time any Western nation carried out an execution by beheading, as well as the most recent government-sanctioned guillotine execution in the world.

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See also

Further reading

  • Mercer, Jeremy (2008). When the Guillotine Fell: The Bloody Beginning and Horrifying End to France's River of Blood, 1791–1977. Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-4299-3608-8.
  • Jean-Yves Le Nahour, Le Dernier guillotiné, Paris, First Editions, 2011

References

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