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AFP -Malika Boumendjel died last year, before hearing the apology she had long sought
It is a huge moment for the grandchildren of lawyer Ali Boumendjel, who were received by French President Emmanuel Macron to hear the truth about the assassination of their grandfather.
His widow Malika Boumendjel, who fought for decades for the truth about her husband’s disappearance rejecting the French official account of suicide, passed away last year aged 101 without hearing the acknowledgement she waited for all her life.
For Riceputi a rexamination of the French colonial rule in Algeria should not be restricted to "emblematic figures" such Maurice Audin and Ali Boumendjel.
The French army in Algeria adopted since 1957 the technique of "forced disappearance" as a systematic method to crush the nationalists, according to Mr Riceputi.
It consisted of abducting, murdering and disposing of the body of any Algerian they suspect of having links with the FLN which led the war for independence.
There were tens of thousands in the capital city, Algiers and many more throughout the country, he says.
It was a "system designed to terrify the population" and silence dissidents and supporters of independence, the historian says.
It has also left dozens of thousands of families and generations of their descendants suffering decades of emotional and psychological trauma.
Mr Riceputi believes that the French authorities are avoiding the essence of the truth through these "selected" and "high-profile" admissions.
What Mr Macron is currently doing, according to him, is "distributing acknowledgements" to the far right here and to the Algerians there, seeking to please all parties.
In 2017 while a presidential candidate, Mr Macron described colonialism as a "war crime" that would be prosecuted nowadays but later fell short of the apology Algerians have been demanding.
The routine torture and murder of Algerian civilians by the French army during the seven-year war that some say claimed 1.5 million Algerian lives has been hushed up for decades.
Indeed, France has never even recognized the existence of a "war" in Algeria. Until 1999 they have always called it the "events" or "troubles" of Algiers. The atrocities committed by their army were described as "operations to maintain order".