Béchar

Date-palm grove, Béchar, Algeria.

Béchar, town, western Algeria. It lies in the northern reaches of the Sahara, 36 miles (58 km) south of the border with Morocco. The town is named for nearby Mount Béchar, rising to 1,600 feet (488 metres). Béchar’s former European quarter contains a military station and has modern buildings, while the traditional quarter has covered, narrow streets. Surrounded by date-palm groves watered by the Wadi Béchar, the town is noted for its leatherwork and jewelry. It is a trade centre at the junction of trans-Saharan roads, is the terminus of the railroad running southward from Oran, and has an airport. Béchar Djedid (New Béchar), 3 miles (5 km) south, was built to house the employees of the nearby coalfields at Kenadsa.

The surrounding region presents a varied landscape. Near the Moroccan border the land is composed primarily of flat, stony sandstone plateaus (hammadas). To the southeast the landscape is typified by ergs (sand dunes), specifically, parts of the Grand Erg Occidental, the Erg er-Raoui, and the Erg Iguidi. The region is bisected in the north by the Wadi Saoura, which forms the valley where the oasis town of Beni Abbes (Béni-Abbas) lies. Along the Saoura (known as Wadi Messaoud farther south), date-palm groves extend about 200 miles (320 km). To the west the region is crisscrossed by numerous wadis and ravines, forming a landscape known as sabkhah. Locally important crops include dates, cereals, vegetables, figs, and almonds. Bituminous-coal reserves in the region are exploited minimally because of high transportation costs. Pop. (1998) 131,010; (2008) 165,241.