Sounds
suspiciously like Cheney's "war that won't end in our lifetime."
--
RF
Cameron:
North Africa terrorist threat 'could last decades'
David
Cameron has warned the Algerian hostage crisis could be the start of
a decades-long battle against Islamist terrorism in north Africa.
BBC,
20
January, 2013
Three
Britons are confirmed dead and three more are believed to have died
after the Algerian army stormed the site at In Amenas on Saturday.
Another UK resident is also thought to be dead.
One
victim has been named as 46-year-old Paul Thomas Morgan.
Five
hostage-takers were reported captured at the plant on Sunday.
The
UK prime minister said the incident was a "stark reminder"
of the terrorist threat in that part of the world and added: "This
is a global threat and it will require a global response.
"It
will require a response that is about years, even decades, rather
than months."
'Iron
resolve'
"It
requires a response that is patient and painstaking, that is tough
but also intelligent, but above all has an absolutely iron resolve
and that is what we will deliver over these coming years," added
Mr Cameron.
The
prime minister, who will make a statement about the events in Algeria
in the Commons on Monday, said there were clear similarities with the
terrorist threat from Afghanistan and Pakistan, although it was on a
different scale.
Mokhtar
Belmokhtar claimed the attack was a response to France's intervention
in neighbouring Mali
"What
we face is an extremist, Islamist, al-Qaeda-linked terrorist group.
Just as we had to deal with that in Pakistan and in Afghanistan so
the world needs to come together to deal with this threat in north
Africa," he said.
"It
is linked to al-Qaeda, it wants to destroy our way of life, it
believes in killing as many people as it can. We need to work with
others to defeat the terrorists and to close down the ungoverned
spaces where they thrive with all the means that we have."
A
raid by Algerian troops on Saturday ended a four-day siege in which
at least 48 hostages are thought to have died.
There
are reports that 25 bodies found at the complex on Sunday are all
those of captives.
This
comes a day after Algerian officials reported the deaths of 23
hostages, with more said to be unaccounted for, and 32 militants.
Algerian
officials said the hostage-takers - from six different nationalities
- belonged to a new Islamist group formed by a veteran Algerian
militant and kidnapper, Mokhtar Belmokhtar, who recently broke from
al-Qaeda.
Mauritanian
website Sahara Media says he has claimed responsibility for the
hostage-taking in a video message.
He
said the operation had been led by 40 migrants from "several
Islamic countries, even from the Western countries".
The
video is said to have showed Belmokhtar claiming he was prepared to
negotiate with Western and Algerian leaders if French military
offensives against Islamists in neighbouring Mali were stopped.
A
BP spokesman would not comment on reports in the Algerian media that
Belmokhtar had infiltrated his men as drivers, cooks and guards
working on short-term contracts for BP at the complex.
The
company released a statement confirming that 18 of its employees were
at In Amenas at the time of the attack and 14 of them were safe,
although two had sustained injuries which were not life-threatening.
"BP
remains gravely concerned about four of its employees who are
missing. There is no further confirmed information regarding their
status at this time," the firm added.
'Free
to go'
In
a statement from Mr Morgan's mother, Marianne, 65, and his
36-year-old partner, Emma Steele, he was described as "a true
gentleman, a family man".
The
first British victim to be named was Paul Thomas Morgan, aged 46
"He
very much loved his partner Emma, his mum, brothers and sister, of
who he was very proud," the statement said. "He loved life
and lived it to the full. He was a professional man proud to do the
job he did and died doing the job he loved.
"We
are so proud of him and so proud of what he achieved in his life. We
are devastated by Paul's death and he will be truly missed."
Twenty-two
British survivors have been flown back to the UK and reunited with
their families.
Scotland's
First Minister Alex Salmond said eight Scottish survivors were now
back in the UK, but added: "We know that two Scots, or people
with immediate Scottish family connections, are believed to have been
killed."
One
hostage - Alan Wright, 37, from Aberdeenshire - described hiding in
an office when the Islamists attacked, before cutting through a fence
and escaping.
The
crisis began on Wednesday when militants attacked two buses carrying
foreign workers and Algerians to the remote site in south-eastern
Algeria. A Briton and an Algerian reportedly died at the scene.
The
militants then took Algerians and foreign workers hostage at the
complex, which was quickly surrounded by the Algerian army.
The
Algerian armed forces staged an initial attack on Thursday as
militants tried to move some of their captives from the facility.
Mr
Cameron paid his condolences to the bereaved families, who had
undergone "an absolutely dreadful ordeal".
He
said questions would be asked about the Algerian response to the
crisis, but added: "The responsibility for these deaths lies
squarely with the terrorists who launched these vicious and cowardly
attacks."
Allen
McCloud, from Plymouth, was one of 22 Britons who survived the crisis
State
news agency APS said 685 Algerian workers and 107 out of 132
foreigners working at the plant had been freed.
The
nationalities of some of the hostages killed are still not known, but
as well as the Britons, US, Norwegian, and Japanese nationals are
also missing.
A
Colombian citizen resident in the UK is believed to be among the
dead.
'Stressful'
Two
of the survivors have been named as Lou Fear, 56, from Louth in
Lincolnshire and
Other
freed hostages have been named as Iain Strachan, 38, from Howwood in
Renfrewshire; Darren Matthews, from Saltburn-by-the-Sea, Teesside;
Mark Grant, 29, from Grangemouth, near Falkirk; Alan Wright, 37, from
Portsoy in Aberdeenshire; Peter Hunter, 53, from County Durham; David
Murray, 47, from Kirkby in Merseyside; Huw Edwards, 55, from
Macclesfield in Cheshire; and Stephen McFaul, 36, from Belfast.
The
In Amenas gas field is situated at Tigantourine, about 40km (25
miles) south-west of the town of In Amenas and 1,300km (800 miles)
south-east of Algiers.
The
plant is jointly run by BP, Norway's Statoil and Algeria's
state-owned oil company.
Algeria's
oil minister Youcef Youcefi said the plant would return to production
within the next two days.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.