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Mohamed Mediouri

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Former bodyguard of King Hassan II of Morocco
Haj Mohamed El Mediouri
الحاج محمد المديوري
Mediouri in 1994
President ofKawkab Marrakesh F.C
In office
1984 – December 2002
President of the Moroccan Athletics Federation
In office
1993 – July 2001
Succeeded byAbdeslam Ahizoune
Chief of the Royal Security
In office
1976 – 22 May 2000[1]
Preceded byHadj Ahmed El Faqir
Succeeded byAziz Jaidi
Personal details
Born (1938-04-08)8 April 1938 (age 87)
Spouse
ChildrenFatima Zahra Mediouri
Monsif Mediouri[2]
RelativesPrincess Lalla Meryem (stepdaughter)
King Mohammed VI (stepson)
Princess Lalla Asma (stepdaughter)
Princess Lalla Hasna (stepdaughter)
Prince Moulay Rachid (stepson)

Haj Mohamed El Mediouri (Arabic:الحاج محمد المديوري; born 8 April 1938)[2] is the former chief of the personal security, and the senior bodyguard, of KingHassan II of Morocco.[3][4][5]

Outside his official security position inside the palace, he was the president ofKawakab Marrakesh football club and theMoroccan Athletics federation.[2]

After the death of Hassan II, he married his widowLalla Latifa and settled in France.[6][7] He was discharged of all of his official positions.[8]

El Mediouri was also involved in business, he was the exclusive distributor ofMotorolaTalkie Walkies in Morocco.[6] His son reportedly still runs this business.[6]

Biography

[edit]

Haj Mohammed Mediouri started his career as policeman in the CMI (compagnie marocaine d'intervention),[6] the riot control division of the Moroccan police. After the coups attempts of the early 1970s Hassan II realized that his security was insufficient and taskedRaymond Sassia (former bodyguard ofCharles de Gaulle) with the formation of a new security for the monarch.[3] Sassia recruited and trained, with the assistance of Hadj Ahmed El Faqir, Mediouri among others, but he became close to the king, and he eventually replaced Sassia in the late 1970s as chief of security in the royal palace.

In May 2000, he married PrincessLalla Latifa, the widow of King Hassan II.[8][3]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Basri limogé, qui l'aurait cru!".L'Economiste. 28 July 2008. Retrieved7 February 2014.
  2. ^abcTaieb CHADI (28 March 1998)."Portrait du président de la FRMA, Abnégation Popularité incontestée".Maroc hebdo. Retrieved7 February 2014.
  3. ^abcIgnace Dalle (9 March 2011).Hassan II entre tradition et absolutisme. Fayard.ISBN 978-2-213-66458-3.
  4. ^"La "mystérieuse" agression du beau-père de Mohamed VI".leparisien.fr (in French). 2019-05-21. Retrieved2020-11-20.
  5. ^"Maroc: "mystérieuse" agression de l'ex-chef de la sécurité royale".Le Figaro (in French). AFP. 2019-05-21. Retrieved2020-11-20.
  6. ^abcdMahjoub Tobji (2006-09-13).Les officiers de Sa Majesté:Les dérives des généraux marocains 1956-2006. Fayard.ISBN 978-2-213-64072-3.
  7. ^Ali Amar (2009-04-29).Mohammed VI, le grand malentendu(PDF) (in French). Calman-Levy. p. 52.ISBN 978-2-702-14857-0.Mohamed Médiouri ... had married the mother of Mohammed VI, and therefore the former wife of Hassan II, Latifa
  8. ^ab"MOROCCO : MOHAMED MEDIOURI - 25/05/2000 - Maghreb Confidential".Africa Intelligence. 2000-05-25. Retrieved2024-01-04.
Family and education
Immediate
Extended
Education
Reign
Western Sahara conflict
Entourage
Advisors and/or
members of the royal cabinet
Security officials
Senior bureaucrats
No official position[1]
Senior media-bureaucrats
Business interests
Al Mada (SNI)
Current
Former
Patronages
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mohamed_Mediouri&oldid=1315316521"
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