‘Mali’ Islamists kill 3, take 41 hostage in Algeria
Islamists claiming to come from Mali killed three foreigners and are holding 41 more hostage after a raid on a compound near an Algerian gas field. The attack is reportedly in retaliation to the ongoing French military campaign in Mali.
An
undated handout picture released by the BP petroleum company on
January 16, 2013, shows their operation at the In Amenas field in the
Sahara desert, 1,300 kilometres (810 miles) southeast of Algiers,
close to the Libyan border. (AFP Photo/BP)
RT,
16
January, 2013
The
Algerian interior ministry said a heavily armed terrorist group using
three vehicles launched an early morning attack against a base owned
by Sontrach, the Algerian national oil company.
A
Briton and an Algerian security guard were killed and seven people
were injured in the assault, including two foreigners, Algeria's
official APS news agency said. A French national was also killed in
the attack, Reuters cites a local source as saying.
The
Foreign Office in London said it could not confirm that a Briton had
been killed, only that “British Nationals ”were
caught up in an "ongoing terrorist incident."
"Forty-one
westerners including seven Americans, French, British and Japanese
citizens have been taken hostage," a
spokesman for the Islamists told the Mauritanian News Agency and
Sahara Media.
He
said some of the hostages were being held at the gas plant, while the
others were in a nearby housing complex.
Thirteen
Norwegian employees working for the energy company Statoil have also
been taken hostage inside the natural gas facility, Norwegian Prime
Minister Jens Stoltenberg said at a news conference on Wednesday.
"We've
asked the Algerian authorities to put the life and health of the
hostages above all," Foreign
Minister Espen Barth Eide told reporters.
Algerian
security forces have surrounded the kidnappers, a security official
based in the region told AP. He confirmed that the militants had come
from Mali, though he spoke on condition of anonymity as he was not
authorized to speak to the press.
The
Algerian Press Service (APS) reports that the Algerians taken hostage
have been set free.
"The
kidnappers are demanding the release of 100 terrorists being held in
Algeria, in exchange for their hostages," a
worker at the gas complex told AFP by telephone.
"(They) have
demanded that these (detained) Islamists
be taken to northern Mali,"
the source added.
Algerian
authorities have ruled out negotiating with the Islamist fighters,
however, leaving the fate of the foreign hostages in doubt.
"The
Algerian authorities will not respond to the demands of the
terrorists and will not negotiate," Interior
Minister Daho Ould Kablia was quoted by state news agency APS.
The
United States confirmed on Wednesday that US citizens were among the
hostages.
Secretary
of State Hillary Clinton telephoned Algeria's prime minister to
discuss the incident, though a State Department spokeswoman would not
give any further details as they continue in their efforts to "secure
these people."
US
Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta has said the US "will
take all necessary and proper steps"
to deal with what he described as a “terrorist
attack.”
Panetta did not outline what concrete actions the United States would
take to deal with the hostage crisis.
An
al-Qaeda affiliated group said the raid was executed in retaliation
to Algeria’s decision to allow France to use its airspace to launch
airstrikes against militants in Mila, where French forces have been
targeting Islamists fighters since last week.
A
spokesman for the group called Algeria's attitude "a
betrayal for the blood of Algerian martyrs slain by the French
colonists."
The
group further said to ensure the safety of the kidnapped hostages in
Algeria, the French attack on Northern Mali must end, Reuters
reports.
On
Wednesday French troops launched their first ground operation against
Islamist rebels following six days of airstrikes.
French
President Francois Hollande said on Tuesday French forces would
remain in Mali until stability was returned to the conflict-torn West
African state.
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