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Driss Guiga (born 21 August 1924) is a Tunisian lawyer and politician who was Minister of Health, Minister of Education and then Minister of the Interior for four years during the later part of the Habib Bourguiba regime. ==Early years== Driss Guiga was born on 21 August 1924. His birthplace was Testour, a village in the northwest of Tunisia where his father was a teacher. He joined the national movement when he was 14 and was a student at Sadiki College in Tunis. The French colonial authorities arrested his teacher, Ali Belhaouane, on 8 April 1938. Belhaouane was responsible for the youth organization of the Neo Destour nationalist party, which had been founded four years earlier. A general strike followed, and the college was closed for two months. Guiga joined a secret cell of the party, met Habib Bourguiba and became a "bourguibiste." Guiga studied law and history at the University of Algiers (1944–47), where he met his future wife Chacha, a painter. They would have four children. He then enrolled at the Law Faculty of Paris, where he obtained a diploma in civil law in 1949. After returning to Tunis he joined the firm of his uncle, Bahri Guiga, a lawyer and politician. He practiced Law from 1948 to 1952. He also wrote for the journal ''Mission'' created by Hedi Amara Nouira. He was arrested in 1952 and spent seven months in prison. In 1952 Guiga was appointed Head of the Office of the Minister of Public Health. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Driss Guiga」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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