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Algeria crisis: Captors and hostages die in assault - Foreign Affairs - Nairaland

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Algeria crisis: Captors and hostages die in assault by beylinko(m): 10:17pm On Jan 19, 2013
A four-day siege at a gas facility in the Sahara desert has ended, with militants and some hostages killed.
Seven hostages were killed by their captors during a final raid by Algerian troops - at least 23 hostages and 32 hostage-takers died in the four-day stand-off, Algerian officials say.
Five Britons are feared dead or missing - five Norwegians are unaccounted for.
French President FrancoisHollande defended the Algerian response to the crisis as being "the most suitable".
"When you have people taken hostage in such large numbers by terrorists with such cold determination and ready to kill those hostages - as they did - Algeria has an approach which to me, as I see it, is the most appropriate because there could be no negotiation," he told journalists.
UK Prime Minister David Cameron said that "one British citizen has alreadybeen killed in this brutal attack and we now fear the worst for the lives of five others who are not yet accounted for".
"There is no justification for taking innocent life in this way. Our determination is stronger than ever to work with allies right around the world to root out and defeat this terrorist scourge and those who encourage it," Mr Cameron said.
Clearing mines
Play
William Hague: "Our focus is on getting British nationals who have survived this ordeal backto the UK"
The In Amenas gas field issituated at Tigantourine, about 40km (25 miles) south-west of the town ofIn Amenas and 1,300km (800 miles) south-east of Algiers.
The plant is jointly run byBP, Norway's Statoil and Algeria's state-owned oil company.
The militants had been involved in a stand-off since Thursday after trying to occupy the remote site.
Details are still sketchy, but unconfirmed reports say the hostage-takers summarily killed the remaining seven hostages before themselves being killed ina final army raid.
.
Citing a provisional total from the interior ministry, state news agency APS said 685 Algerian workersand 107 out of 132 foreigners working at the plant had been freed.
At least 23 hostages are known to have died, but the nationalities of some are still not known.
Foreign citizens involved
*. Fourteen Japanese missing
*. Five Norwegians missing
*. Five Britons feared dead or unaccounted for
*. Unknown number of Americans
*. Possibly citizens of Romania, Thailand, the Philippines, Colombia, South Korea and Austria
.
With 14 Japanese nationals thought to be missing, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said he had received "severe information" about the fate of the hostages.
The chief executive of BPgroup said 14 of its 18 staff were safe - the company had "grave fears" for the other four.
Helge Lund, chief executive of Norway's Statoil, said the company was still missing five workers and feared "bad news", Reuters news agency reported.
Algerian national oil and gas company Sonatrach said the army was now clearing mines planted by the militants.
The Algerian interior ministry said troops had recovered:
*. six machine guns
*. 21 rifles
*. two shotguns
*. two 60mm mortarswith shells
*. six 60mm missiles with launchers
*. two rocket-propelled grenades with eight rockets
*. 10 grenades in explosive belts
Weapons allegedly seizedfrom the kidnappers wereshown on Algerian TV.
Play
US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta: "We cannot accept attacks against our citizens abroad"
The crisis began on Wednesday when militantsattacked two buses carrying foreign workers. A Briton and an Algerian reportedly died in the incident.
The militants then took Algerians and expatriateshostage at the complex. The leader of the hostage-takers is said tobe a veteran fighter from Niger, named as Abdul Rahman al-Nigeri by the Mauritanian news agency ANI, which has been in contact with the militants.
The Algerian armed forces attacked on Thursday as militants tried to move some of their captives from the facility.
APS reported before Saturday's raid that a group of militants remained at the site, holed up in a workshop with the remaining hostages and armed with rocket-launchers and machine guns.
A statement from the kidnappers said the assault on the gas plant was launched in retaliation for French intervention against Islamist groups in neighbouring Mali.
http://mobile.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-21101092
Re: Algeria crisis: Captors and hostages die in assault by beylinko(m): 10:49pm On Jan 19, 2013
RIP to the dead hostages while the terrorist should rot in hell.
Re: Algeria crisis: Captors and hostages die in assault by beylinko(m): 1:19pm On Jan 20, 2013
Mods,pls this should be on the first page? Let people know the end to the kidnapping saga. Thanks

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