Guess Who - Game

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Feb 20, 2010
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Now we're cooking on gas.

He's not Albanian, but he is from a country that was part of the EU in the 20th Century. He retired before 1970.
 
Feb 20, 2010
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Not necessarily, because the way I answered the question did not necessarily mean that the country left the EU. But of course, Abdel-Kader had French nationality because of when he was born. It's a similarly difficult one to if you picked, say, Yohann Gène. He's from Guadeloupe, so strictly speaking he's from North America. But he's also French, so do you answer the question "European?" yes or no? Hard to say. Similarly, from 1963 to 1989 Algeria was under a Socialist government (and indeed carries the "People's Democratic Republic" name to this day), but it was not traditional Marxist-Leninist, so difficult to answer the Communism question too.
 
Re:

Libertine Seguros said:
Not necessarily, because the way I answered the question did not necessarily mean that the country left the EU. But of course, Abdel-Kader had French nationality because of when he was born. It's a similarly difficult one to if you picked, say, Yohann Gène. He's from Guadeloupe, so strictly speaking he's from North America. But he's also French, so do you answer the question "European?" yes or no? Hard to say. Similarly, from 1963 to 1989 Algeria was under a Socialist government (and indeed carries the "People's Democratic Republic" name to this day), but it was not traditional Marxist-Leninist, so difficult to answer the Communism question too.

No worry, you were right on every point, in my opinion.

French Algeria consisted of "départements", I think there were three of them: Oran, Algiers and Constantine. The French regime didn't officially consider it a colony (factually you argue it was of course but not administratively) which means that Zaaf can be considered French in his racing days. The other colonies of their Empire were true colonies, Algeria was was just an exceptional case.

Same for Yohann Gène. Guadeloupe is a French "département", so part of the centralised French republic, technically speaking. The currency is the euro. The question would be trickier for New Caledonia which isn't a "département" but an oversea "territory", which enjoys some autonomy and its currency still is the frank. This being said I don't know of any rider from New Caledonia. :p

I wouldn't consider the FLN communist either. The Algerian Communist Party was banned and dissolved in 1964, that was even before Boumediene's coup.
 
Jan 20, 2011
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Retired before 2004?-No
From a country with mountains?-yes
From a country with a WT race?-Yes
 
Jan 20, 2011
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Re:

Libertine Seguros said:
Inactive because retired?
Inactive because suspended?

Couldn't find a Team,

Don't know whether he's officially retired, but is currently unattached.