Tag Archives: Ain Amenas

Algeria's security forces to protect energy plants

An Algerian official says that the country’s security forces will take over the job of securing the country’s oil and gas sites following a spectacular terrorist attack and mass hostage-taking on a gas installation in January.

An inquiry into the Ain Amenas plant assault blasted private companies currently responsible for site security in Algeria‘s energy sectors for failing to prevent it, according to an Interior Ministry official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.

The official said the inquiry found that the site’s infrastructure “was not capable of either preventing this terrorist attack and even less so repelling it.”

In all, 37 hostages, including an Algerian security guard, and 29 attackers were killed in a four-day standoff.

…read more
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Algerian gas plant in terror siege resumes work

A gas installation in Algeria that was the site of a terrorist attack last month that left 37 hostages dead has partially resumed production.

Prime Minister Abdelmalek Sellal started up one of three gas streams at the Ain Amenas site Sunday, bringing it up to about 35 percent capacity, according to state radio.

On Jan. 16, a band of al-Qaida affiliated militants attacked the Ain Amenas complex and took dozens of foreign workers hostage. After a four-day standoff, the Algerian army moved in and killed 29 attackers and captured three others. At least 37 hostages, including one Algerian worker, died in the battle.

The Ain Amenas facility is jointly run by BP, Algeria‘s Sonatrach and Norway’s Statoil. Sunday marked the anniversary of Algeria‘s 1971 nationalization of its oil industry.

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Nigeria hostage crisis differs from Algerian drama

The kidnapping of seven foreign workers in Nigeria claimed by an Islamic extremist group has touched a nerve in Europe, coming just weeks after the tragic end of a hostage drama in Algeria in which 37 gas plant workers and 29 al Qaida-linked militants died. But analysts say the similarities probably end there and it’s too early to know how this latest crisis will play itself out.

A group that calls itself Ansaru issued a short statement about the kidnapping in northern Nigeria over the weekend, hinting at political motivations for snatching what Nigerian authorities say are one British citizen, one Greek, one Italian, three Lebanese and one Filipino.

But Ansaru did not make any demands, and analysts warn that if recent history is any indication, the hostage situation probably will not be resolved in a flash.

“What is likely to happen is some kind of drawn-out period — weeks or months — on how to maneuver to safeguard the lives of these hostages while not giving in to ransom demands,” said Mark Schroeder, vice president of Africa analysis at Stratfor, a U.S.-based private global intelligence firm.

Governments and analysts have long warned about the risk of kidnapping in northern Nigeria. More broadly, the Sahel region of Africa has seen scores of kidnappings involving foreigners — some held for years. On Tuesday, French officials said that seven French citizens, including four children, have been kidnapped in Cameroon and are believed to have been taken to Nigeria.

The situation is very different in Algeria, where the army moved in after a standoff lasting just four days to end the crisis at the Ain Amenas complex.

Virginia Comolli, a research associate focused on extremism at London’s International Institute for Strategic Studies, noted that Algeria wanted to “send a very strong message” to hostage takers and display a no-nonsense, hard-fisted approach.

“The Nigerians would not want to jeopardize the relationship they have with the Brits,” Comolli said, pointing to the country’s longstanding relationship with Britain on counterterrorism. “They want to be careful. If they were to act without consulting with their British counterparts it would definitely not go down well.”

Western governments also might not have the confidence in local Nigerian security forces to carry out an advanced hostage rescue operation and will likely mobilize their own security forces and agents. But going in …read more
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BP names 4th staff member killed in Algeria siege

BP has named Stephen Green as the fourth member of its staff who was killed during a terrorist assault on an Algerian gas plant last month.

The company said Tuesday that 47-year-old Green was killed when terrorists took control of the Ain Amenas plant.

Officials said his name could not be released until an inquest had been completed.

BP had earlier named three other employees killed in the attack as Seb John, Carlos Estrada and Gordon Rowan.

The Ain Amenas facility is jointly run by BP, Algeria‘s Sonatrach and Norway’s Statoil

The Jan. 16 attack, which led to a four-day standoff between al-Qaida-affiliated militants and the Algerian army, left at least 37 foreign workers and 29 militants dead.

…read more
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Algeria forms commission to study attack

An Algerian official says a high ranking commission headed by the prime minister has been formed to investigate the terror attack on a gas complex that resulted in dozens of foreign workers being killed.

The commission includes members from the ministries of defense, interior, foreign affairs, labor and energy, the official said late Thursday, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the press.

The official adds that the Ministry of Energy, meanwhile, is working with British and U.S. experts to review the damage to the Ain Amenas gas complex and determine when or if production can start anew.

The head of the plant told visiting journalists Thursday that he expected at least one of the three gas units would go back into production “soon.”

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Sahara tourism takes hit after Algerian gas plant attack

The awe-inspiring dunes and wild mountains of Algeria‘s Sahara have lured adventure travelers for decades, but their latest incarnation — as a crossroad for the Al Qaeda militants who attacked a natural gas complex — is likely to make them even more inaccessible.

At least 37 hostages died in the four-day siege deep in the desert. Algeria‘s government, ambivalent about tourism in the best of time, is expected to impose new restrictions on the vast south, whose residents eke out a living on the few intrepid tourists who arrive.

“The Sahara is an iconic wilderness much like the Himalaya or Antarctica and most agree that Algeria, the ninth biggest country in the world, is the best place to experience the full range of desert landscapes, authentic Tuareg culture, pre-historic rock art, adventure and so on,” said Chris Scott, a Sahara guide and author. “It’s all there and the people of the south have decades of experience in delivering what tourists want.”

Scott just returned from leading a two-week New Year‘s camel trek through Tassili N’Ajjer National Park, 250 miles south of the Ain Amenas gas facility that was attacked.

But he is an exception. The numbers of tourists visiting the deep south dropped from 1,807 in 2011 to 643 last year, according to authorities in Tamanrasset, the main Saharan city. Already, 70 of the 76 tourist companies in the city have closed, and most Europeans planning on coming canceled their reservations after the attack, said Azzi Addi Ahmed, head of the local tourism association.

This is a far cry from 20,000 tourists a year in the 1980s, when restrictions were few and you could travel without the local tourist agencies that are now mandatory.

The region has long been loved by Europeans. The towering dunes and palm-fringed oases that epitomize the desert can be found in Algeria‘s Grand Ergs. Even farther the south, the rugged wind-carved mountains are dotted with 10,000-year-old cave paintings.

In 1911, a French soldier turned monk made his home among the Tuareg tribesmen and built a hermitage atop the nearly 10,000 foot Mount Assekrem in the Hoggar range near Tamanrasset, describing the surrounding peaks as more magnificent than any cathedral.

“My hermitage here is on a summit that overlooks practically the whole of the Hoggar and stands amid wild-looking mountains beyond which the seemingly limitless horizon makes one think of the infinitude of God,” wrote Charles Foucauld.

Even then, the southern deserts were perilous: He was killed by marauding Senoussi tribesmen in 1916, and beatified by the Roman Catholic church in 2005.

The Sahara was largely closed to tourists during Algeria‘s years of civil war and wasn’t reopened until the late 1990s when business rapidly picked up as Europeans rushed back to do desert safaris.

But, the government‘s victories against the militant Islamists in the north forced them to find refuge in the deserts to the south, mainly in northern Mali and Niger, where they engaged in smuggling and then the occasional lucrative kidnapping of foreigners.

Algeria‘s desert tourism received a major blow in 2003 when a precursor to Al Qaeda snatched 32 foreign tourists, though all but one were eventually rescued and business recovered.

All that changed, however, when the overthrow of the Libyan regime flooded the desert with weapons, and a rebellion broke out in neighboring Mali, massively boosting Al Qaeda‘s strength in the region.

“Already a large number of agencies have closed, leaving just those who do it for the love of the business to barely scratch by,” said Iyad Gholami of the Assouf desert travel company in Tamanrasset. “We’re collateral damage from the security crisis.”

Phil Hassrick, who runs the California-based Lost Frontiers adventure travel company, stopped going to Algeria a few years ago.

“We couldn’t guarantee the safety of the clients,” he said, though back then it was more concern with banditry.

The impact is the most severe on the local Tuareg for whom tourism was one of the few sources of income, aside from smuggling.

Over the past year, the government said it would try to encourage Algerians to travel to the south, including periodic government and company visits, but operators complain that the visits are short, rare and don’t involve the weeks of driving or trekking through the mountains desired by foreigners, who paid $1,500 a week to local guides.

In December, the remaining agencies petitioned the government to save the industry.

“At the very least we ask for the erasing of the debts linked to accumulated taxes as has been done for other sectors in difficulty, such as agriculture,” Ahmed suggested. Lowering fares to the south on the state-owned carrier, Air Algerie, would be a big help, he said, but fears it may be too late.

“The attack on Ain Amenas is for us the coup de grace,” Ahmed said. “It is the death of tourism in south Algeria.”

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Algeria crisis strangling Sahara tourism

The awe-inspiring dunes and wild mountains of Algeria‘s Sahara have lured adventure travelers for decades, but their latest incarnation — as a crossroad for the al-Qaida militants who attacked a natural gas complex — is likely to make them even more inaccessible.

At least 37 hostages died in the four-day siege deep in the desert. Algeria‘s government, ambivalent about tourism in the best of time, is expected to impose new restrictions on the vast south, whose residents eke out a living on the few intrepid tourists who arrive.

“The Sahara is an iconic wilderness much like the Himalaya or Antarctica and most agree that Algeria, the ninth biggest country in the world, is the best place to experience the full range of desert landscapes, authentic Tuareg culture, pre-historic rock art, adventure and so on,” said Chris Scott, a Sahara guide and author. “It’s all there and the people of the south have decades of experience in delivering what tourists want.”

Scott just returned from leading a two-week New Year‘s camel trek through Tassili N’Ajjer National Park, 400 kilometers (250 miles) south of the Ain Amenas gas facility that was attacked.

But he is an exception. The numbers of tourists visiting the deep south dropped from 1,807 in 2011 to 643 last year, according to authorities in Tamanrasset, the main Saharan city. Already, 70 of the 76 tourist companies in the city have closed, and most Europeans planning on coming canceled their reservations after the attack, said Azzi Addi Ahmed, head of the local tourism association.

This is a far cry from 20,000 tourists a year in the 1980s, when restrictions were few and you could travel without the local tourist agencies that are now mandatory.

The region has long been loved by Europeans. The towering dunes and palm-fringed oases that epitomize the desert can be found in Algeria‘s Grand Ergs. Even farther the south, the rugged wind-carved mountains are dotted with 10,000-year-old cave paintings.

In 1911, a French soldier turned monk made his home among the Tuareg tribesmen and built a hermitage atop the nearly 10,000 foot (2,800 meter) Mount Assekrem in the Hoggar range near Tamanrasset, describing the surrounding peaks as more magnificent than any cathedral.

“My hermitage here is on a summit that overlooks practically the whole of the Hoggar and stands amid wild-looking mountains beyond which the seemingly limitless horizon makes one think of the infinitude of God,” wrote Charles Foucauld.

Even then, the southern deserts were perilous: He was killed by marauding Senoussi tribesmen in 1916, and beatified by the Roman Catholic church in 2005.

The Sahara was largely closed to tourists during Algeria‘s years of civil war and wasn’t reopened until the late 1990s when business rapidly picked up as Europeans rushed back to do desert safaris.

But, the government‘s victories against the militant Islamists in the north forced them to find refuge in the deserts to the south, mainly in northern Mali and Niger, where they engaged in smuggling and then the occasional lucrative kidnapping of foreigners.

Algeria‘s desert tourism received a major blow in 2003 when a precursor to al-Qaida snatched 32 foreign tourists, though all but one were eventually rescued and business recovered.

All that changed, however, when the overthrow of the Libyan regime flooded the desert with weapons, and a rebellion broke out in neighboring Mali, massively boosting al-Qaida’s strength in the region.

“Already a large number of agencies have closed, leaving just those who do it for the love of the business to barely scratch by,” said Iyad Gholami of the Assouf desert travel company in Tamanrasset. “We’re collateral damage from the security crisis.”

Phil Hassrick, who runs the California-based Lost Frontiers adventure travel company, stopped going to Algeria a few years ago.

“We couldn’t guarantee the safety of the clients,” he said, though back then it was more concern with banditry.

The impact is the most severe on the local Tuareg for whom tourism was one of the few sources of income, aside from smuggling.

Over the past year, the government said it would try to encourage Algerians to travel to the south, including periodic government and company visits, but operators complain that the visits are short, rare and don’t involve the weeks of driving or trekking through the mountains desired by foreigners, who paid $1,500 a week to local guides.

In December, the remaining agencies petitioned the government to save the industry.

“At the very least we ask for the erasing of the debts linked to accumulated taxes as has been done for other sectors in difficulty, such as agriculture,” Ahmed suggested. Lowering fares to the south on the state-owned carrier, Air Algerie, would be a big help, he said, but fears it may be too late.

“The attack on Ain Amenas is for us the coup de grace,” Ahmed said. “It is the death of tourism in south Algeria.”

_______

Schemm reported from Rabat, Morocco.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

2 guards killed in attack on Algerian gas pipeline

Gunmen attacked a gas pipeline in northern Algeria and killed two village guards before being driven off, a local security official said Monday.

The attack took place late Sunday night when the militants launched a series of homemade mortar shells at the Ain Chikh site, 75 miles (120 kilometers) southwest of Algiers, protected by local community guards.

Army units were alerted and proceeded to search the entire area, which is on the southern edge of the Kabylie mountain region that has become the last hideout of al-Qaida in northern Algeria.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

Terrorist attacks have dropped dramatically in Algeria‘s populated north in the past few years and are largely restricted to a few pinprick operations against local security forces.

The weakness of these once-powerful remnants of al-Qaida in the north of the country is in stark contrast to the extremist groups found far to the south in the Sahara — one of which mounted an audacious attack and took hostages two weeks ago.

The four day standoff in Ain Amenas, some 800 miles (1,300 kilometers) south of the capital involved dozens of foreign hostages and was ended by an Algerian army assault Jan. 19 leaving more than 60 dead.

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Britain warns of threat to Westerners in Somalia

British citizens should immediately leave the Somaliland region of Somalia because of a specific threat to Westerners, British diplomats said Sunday.

In a statement emailed to reporters, Britain’s Foreign Office did not go into any further detail about the nature of the threat but noted that “kidnapping for financial or political gain, motivated by criminality or terrorism” is an issue throughout the country.

The new warning was issued only days after Britain, Germany, the Netherlands and Canada urged their citizens in the Libyan city of Benghazi to evacuate in response to what was then described as an imminent threat to Westerners. European officials told The Associated Press at the time that schools were thought to be among the potential targets.

The exact reason for the warnings remains unclear, but they come at a time of heightened tension across north Africa. French and African land forces are battling Al Qaeda-linked Islamists in northern Mali, while a renewed bout of unrest has gripped Egypt following the two year anniversary of the revolution that toppled strongman Hosni Mubarak.

A Jan. 16 attack on the Ain Amenas natural gas plant in the Sahara ignited a four-day siege by Algerian forces in which at least 37 hostages and 29 militants died. An Al Qaeda-affiliated group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

Libya also remains unstable following the overthrow of Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi.

It was unclear if any of those factors played a role in Britain’s latest warning.

Somaliland, a former British colony, declared independence in 1991 when Somalia‘s central government in Mogadishu collapsed. The international community does not recognize Somaliland as a separate country.

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Norway's 4th missing hostage confirmed dead in Algeria

The Norwegian energy company Statoil says a fourth Norwegian employee missing after a terror attack on a natural gas plant in Algeria has been confirmed dead.

Statoil CEO Helge Lund says the deceased was 43-year-old Alf Vik.

Lund said Saturday that one Statoil employee remains missing from the Jan. 16 attack on the Ain Amenas plant in the Sahara, which ignited a four-day siege by Algerian forces in which at least 37 hostages and 29 militants died. An Al Qaeda-affiliated group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

On Friday, Statoil confirmed the death of three of its Norwegian employees.

It was unclear whether the four were among the missing or whether their bodies had only now been identified. Norway has a forensic team in Algeria helping local officials.

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Norway's 4th missing hostage is dead in Algeria

The Norwegian energy company Statoil says a fourth Norwegian employee missing after a terror attack on a natural gas plant in Algeria has been confirmed dead.

Statoil CEO Helge Lund says the deceased was 43-year-old Alf Vik.

Lund said Saturday that one Statoil employee remains missing from the Jan. 16 attack on the Ain Amenas plant in the Sahara, which ignited a four-day siege by Algerian forces in which at least 37 hostages and 29 militants died. An al-Qaida-affiliated group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

On Friday, Statoil confirmed the death of three of its Norwegian employees.

It was unclear whether the four were among the missing or whether their bodies had only now been identified. Norway has a forensic team in Algeria helping local officials.

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Algerian assessing 'mistakes' in hostage standoff

Algeria‘s foreign minister said Friday his government is assessing the mistakes made in a hostage crisis at a Saharan gas plant in which many foreign workers were killed by Algerian military strikes.

Mourad Medelci told The Associated Press that Algeria needs to reinforce security conditions for multinationals working there after Islamist extremists raided the Ain Amenas plant and seized the hostages last week.

Speaking in Switzerland, he said the attack wasn’t targeting Algeria but “investors … and the foreigners who work there.”

The Jan. 16 attack, which an al-Qaida affiliated organization has claimed responsibility for, sent scores of foreign energy workers fleeing across the desert for their lives. A four-day siege by Algerian forces on the complex left at least 37 hostages and 29 militants dead. Some of the fatalities were badly burned, making it difficult to identify them.

Algeria‘s decision to refuse foreign help and send the military to fire on vehicles full of hostages drew widespread international criticism.

Medelci acknowledged that Algeria, which has grappled with internal extremist violence for years, needs international help to combat terrorism.

Norwegian energy company Statoil ASA said Friday that three Norwegian employees missing after the Ain Amenas attack have been confirmed dead. Statoil CEO Helge Lund said the three workers were 58-year-old Tore Bech; Thomas Snekkevik, 35; and 55-year-old Hans M. Bjone.

Bech, who had worked for Statoil in Algeria since 2006, was the stepfather of Norwegian International Development Minister Heikki Holmaas.

Statoil gave no details about the victims or circumstances leading to their discovery or identification.

Two other Norwegian Statoil employees remain missing from the attack, Statoil said.

Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg conveyed condolences to the families of the dead, describing the attack as “brutal … and full of evil.” He added that it is unlikely that any more survivors of the attack will be found.

It was unclear whether the three Norwegians identified on Friday were among the five foreign workers that Algeria has reported missing or whether their bodies had been found but have only now been identified.

Norway has a forensic team in Algeria helping local officials.

____

AP correspondent Angela Charlton contributed from Davos.

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Norway says 2 missing hostages dead in Algeria

Norwegian energy company Statoil ASA said Friday that two Norwegian employees missing after a terror attack on a gas plant in Algeria have been confirmed dead.

Statoil CEO Helge Lund said the two workers were 58-year-old Tore Bech and Thomas Snekkevik, 35. Bech, who had worked for the Statoil in Algeria since 2006, was the stepfather of Norwegian International Development Minister Heikki Holmaas.

Lund gave no details about the victims or circumstances leading to their discovery or identification.

Three other Norwegian Statoil employees are still missing after the Jan. 16 attack on the Ain Amenas plant in the Sahara, which resulted in a four-day siege by Algerian forces, Statoil said. An al-Qaida affiliated organization has claimed responsibility for the attack.

Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg conveyed condolences to the families of the dead, describing the attack as “brutal … and full of evil.” He added that it is unlikely that any more survivors of the attack will be found.

Algerian authorities have said at least 37 hostages and 29 militants died during the terrorist attack — which sent scores of foreign energy workers fleeing across the desert for their lives — and that five were still missing. Some of the fatalities were badly burned, making it difficult to identify them.

It was unclear whether the two Norwegians were among the missing or whether their bodies had been found but have only now been identified. Norway has a forensic team in Algeria helping local officials.

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Al-Qaida leader's brother condemns Mali operation

The brother of al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahri on Wednesday sanctioned violence against the West in retaliation for the French-led campaign against militants in Mali, saying the U.S. and Europe are “making jihadists.”

Mohammed al-Zawahri, one of Egypt‘s most influential jihadi leaders, made his comments in an interview with The Associated Press in Cairo, in the wake of the bloody four-day hostage crisis in Algeria, in which al-Qaida-linked militants seized a gas plant in retaliation for the campaign in Mali.

“All Muslims have the right to stop this aggression by any means,” he said of the French-led military intervention. “This barbarism, aggression and brutality … according to Shariah, we have to confront it.”

“They (the West) are making jihadists,” he added.

The four-day confrontation that began when al-Qaida-affiliated militants stormed the remote desert natural gas complex in Ain Amenas and took hostages early Wednesday. The militants threatened to blow up the entire complex, and Algerian troops finally ended the crisis with a ground assault. In all, 37 hostages, including an Algerian security guard, and 29 militants were killed, but five other foreign workers remain unaccounted for.

The Masked Brigade, the group that claims to have masterminded the takeover, has warned of more such attacks against any country backing France‘s involvement in Mali. French forces there are trying to help stop an advance by Islamic extremists.

Militants offered to free hostages in exchange for the release of two prominent terror suspects jailed in the United States: Omar Abdel Rahman, a blind Egyptian sheik convicted of plotting to blow up New York City landmarks and considered the spiritual leader of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, and Aafia Siddiqui, a Pakistani scientist convicted of shooting at two U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan.

Al-Zawahri, who is the younger brother of the al-Qaida leader, was imprisoned for nearly 12 years under Egypt‘s former president, Hosni Mubarak, including four years in solitary confinement. He was tortured during his time in prison, before eventually being freed after Mubarak’s ouster.

Since his release, he has been appearing in street protests in defense of Shariah, or Islamic law, and on Friday he was among some 200 ultraconservative Islamists and former jihadis who staged a protest in front of the French embassy in Cairo. The protesters raised a banner that read, “Mali is not alone,” and called for a boycott of French products and the expulsion of the French ambassador.

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Algeria militants played shrewd media game

As wildly contradictory accounts trickled out about a terror attack at an Algerian gas plant, one source of information proved to be the most reliable: announcements by the al-Qaida-linked militants themselves.

The hostage-takers phoned in regularly with up-to-the-minute reports, offered eerily accurate numbers of hostages taken and killed, and clearly laid out their goals.

All this came via a Mauritanian news website that — apart from receiving calls from radical Islamists and al-Qaida-linked militants — is known for its reliability on more mundane local news.

Algeria‘s official information, in contrast, was silent and murky. At one point the state news service even went dark online before returning with a home page scrubbed of all mention of the hostage crisis that had riveted the world.

When Algerian officials were willing to comment — only anonymously — their information drastically underplayed the scope of the hostage siege that left at least 37 captives and 29 militants dead and sent scores of foreign energy workers fleeing across the desert for their lives.

The reliability of the information from the kidnappers was a departure from the more bombastic and exaggerated announcements typical of al-Qaida-affiliated insurgents in Iraq, Afghanistan and other conflicts.

Also, instead of publishing statements on a password-protected jihadi website entirely in Arabic, the Masked Brigade that claimed responsibility for the gas plant attack sent its information to a news website published in both French and Arabic, reaching a much wider audience.

“It was in the interests of the gunmen to get their story out and the Algerians didn’t perceive it was in their interest to get the story out in real time,” said William Lawrence, the North Africa analyst for the International Crisis Group. “The gunmen needed to negotiate through the media, politicize the Mali conflict through the media, and score jihadist points in the media.”

The editor of the Mauritanian site, the Nouakchott Information Agency, also known as ANI, attributed the difference in style to the Masked Brigade‘s founder, Moktar Belmoktar.

“Moktar is a man who speaks frankly of what he wants, he’s straight forward,” said El Mokhtar Ould Sidi, who added that his site left out the parts of the kidnappers’ statements that he deemed to be propaganda. “It’s very different from al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb or al-Qaida central.”

Figuring out what was happening during North Africa‘s most audacious terror attack was no easy matter with the Ain Amenas natural gas complex deep in the Sahara desert, more than 800 miles (1,300 kilometers) from the capital, Algiers.

Despite a vibrant local newspaper scene, Algeria is not an easy place for foreign journalists to operate and information about security matters is kept under tight control by the military-dominated government.

Instead, as the four-day standoff unfolded, it was the regular dispatches from the militants carried by the Nouakchott agency that provided the most consistent source of information. The reports also bolstered the militants’ assertions that the Algerian forces had endangered the hostages with their tactics.

No matter how shocking the news was, it seemed to come first and most reliably from the militants.

Soon after the attack began Jan. 16, the militants claimed to have seized 41 hostages. That night, Algerian Interior Minister Dahu Kabila maintained there were only 20 hostages and they were being held by a local terror group.

The militants replied by listing their diverse nationalities, including the presence of Canadians — something only confirmed by the government several days later.

The biggest revelations came on the second day of the standoff when frantic messages from the militants described Algerian helicopters shooting at the complex’s living quarters, followed by a full-scale attack on a convoy of vehicles carrying hostages.

Algerian Foreign Minister Mourad Medelci at the time denied there had been any such airstrike, and all that was reported that day was that the army had foiled an escape attempt.

The ANI, meanwhile, said 35 hostages and 11 fighters were killed, with only seven hostages left alive — a death toll it took Algerian authorities several days to match. In the end, their final numbers were quite close.

The accounts of two hostages who barely escaped the doomed convoy, Irish electrician Stephen McFaul and Filipino civil engineer Ruben Andrada, ended up corroborating the militants’ version of events.

While the Algerian government claimed the kidnappers were trying to escape with their hostages, the militants were trying to take the captives from the complex’s living quarters to the more defensible gas works on the other side when the helicopters attacked.

Being the chosen media outlet for high-profile hostage-takers has not been easy on ANI. At one point, its director was summoned by Mauritanian authorities to defend charges that it was a propaganda outlet for terrorists.

The site was also hacked twice with bogus articles posted blaming the Algerian military for the planning the attack and was also savaged in the Algerian press.

Of course, there were important elements of the hostages’ accounts that didn’t make it into ANI‘s reports. Algerians evacuated from the site described how the militants searched for foreign workers room by room, killing some outright and booby-trapping others with explosives.

Still, late Thursday after the strafing by its helicopters, the Algerian government claimed its special forces had taken control of the gas plant and insisted that only four hostages were dead.

The next morning it turned out that the standoff was still ongoing. Gradually over the next few days, the official toll rose to meet the one first set out by the militants.

In the absence of official information, including at one point Friday when the Algerian Press Service website shut down for 45 minutes and returned with no stories whatsoever on the standoff, quotes from anonymous officials proliferated. Even material carried by that official news service was often sourced to anonymous officials as the military and police kept up a veil of secrecy.

The local press was filled with assertions from anonymous officials, some of which were wildly untrue.

At one point, an anonymous official confirmed Sunday that 25 burnt bodies had been discovered. That meant, when added to the official toll, more than 80 people were dead in the attack. Yet the final amount the next day was just 66 — and it was not clear where the extra bodies had disappeared to.

One area in which there was a zone of silence was the question of any possible Algerian army casualties in the chaotic, four-day fight against an enemy armed with heavy machine guns, missiles and mortars.

It wasn’t until Wednesday, four days after the fighting had ended, that Algeria‘s Ministry of Defense issued a curt statement saying that “contrary to insinuations” regarding casualties, only eight soldiers were lightly wounded.

Algeria has nothing to hide and we opted for total transparency in communicating all information on this matter as soon as it was available,” a member of the prime minister’s office told the AP on Tuesday.

He insisted, however, on speaking on condition of anonymity, because he said he wasn’t authorized to talk to the press.

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Algeria: 8 troops hurt while ending hostage crisis

Algeria says it did not sustain heavy losses and that only eight soldiers suffered minor wounds during a four-day siege of a gas plant by al-Qaida-linked militants who took dozens of foreigners hostage.

It was the first acknowledgement by the government of any military casualties in the standoff at the Ain Amenas plant, where 37 hostages and 29 militants died.

The militants, armed with explosives and automatic weapons, had threatened to blow up the entire complex. Algerian troops tried twice to end the crisis, first by firing from attack helicopters before finally launching a ground assault.

The Defense Ministry condemned Wednesday what it called “insinuations” it took heavy losses. It says the eight wounded were already back at work.

Algerian authorities are typically reluctant to announce military losses.

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Family of Texas man killed in hostage crisis slams Algerian military response

The family of a Houston man killed in the hostage crisis at a remote desert natural gas facility is slamming the Algerian military’s response, saying forces should have waited for backup before launching the assault that left dozens of the hostages dead or missing.

In an interview with MyFoxHouston.com, the family of 57-year-old Victor Lovelady says they are haunted by the many details of his death that remain unknown, and that Lovelady was told the Ain Amenas gas field in the Sahara Desert was safe before he accepted the job as a project manager there.

“My brother shouldn’t have had to die this way,” Lovelady’s older brother Mike Lovelady said. “Everybody dies but he shouldn’t have had to die this way.”

The four-day standoff that began when Mali-based, Al Qaeda-linked militants seized the plant ended Saturday after Algerian troops stormed the complex. The Lovelady family says they wish the Algerian military had waited for backup from British or U.S. special forces.

“I think we could’ve done better than with an all-out military assault,” Lovelady’s daughter Erin Lovelady told MyFoxHouston.com. “That’s my personal feeling.”

Erin Lovelady says her father took the job in Algeria knowing it would give him one-month blocks of time off to spend with his family.

“There’s no words,” the 27-year-old said.”When I was upset, I could call him. When I was happy or when I needed some guidance … I can’t do that anymore. I don’t have that anymore.”

Algeria says 38 hostages of all nationalities and 29 militants died in the standoff.

Three Americans died — Lovelady, fellow Texan Frederick Buttaccio and Gordon Lee Rowan — and seven Americans made it out safely. Five foreign workers remain unaccounted for.

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The Associated Press contributed to this report

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Colorado man survived Algerian hostage crisis by hiding 2 1/2 days

The family of a Colorado man say he survived the hostage crisis in Algeria by hiding from the terrorist for 2 1/2 days.

The statement released Monday said Steven Wysocki was able to escape to the nearby Algerian military base Friday morning. Wysocki worked as a production supervisor at the natural gas field.

He and his wife, Kristi, live in Elbert, a small town on the eastern Colorado plains.

Kristi Wysocki told ABC News that, at times, the terrorists were only a few feet from where her husband was hiding. She said she felt that her husband “made it to hell and back.”

A family spokeswoman said she wouldn’t be doing any other interviews. In the statement, Steven Wysocki asked for privacy as he recovers from the ordeal.

Three U.S. citizens were killed in last week’s hostage standoff at a natural gas complex in Algeria, while seven Americans made it out safely, Obama administration officials said Monday.

The State Department confirmed that gas workers Victor Lynn Lovelady of Houston, Texas, and Gordon Lee Rowan were killed at the Ain Amenas field in the Sahara. U.S. officials identified Texas resident Frederick Buttaccio as the first death last week.

“I’m glad we were able to get some rescued, but we did lose three Americans,” Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said as he was leaving the Capitol, where he attended President Obama‘s second inauguration. “That just tells us that Al Qaeda is committed to creating terror wherever they are and we’ve got to fight back.”

A U.S. official had told The Associated Press earlier Monday that the FBI had recovered Lovelady’s and Rowan’s bodies and notified their families. The official had no details on how the Americans died, and their hometowns were not released.

Militants who attacked Ain Amenas had offered to release Lovelady and Rowan in exchange for the freedom of two prominent terror suspects jailed in the United States: Omar Abdel Rahman, a blind sheik convicted of plotting to blow up New York City landmarks and considered the spiritual leader of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, and Aafia Siddiqui, a Pakistani scientist convicted of shooting at two U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan.

The Obama administration rejected the offer outright.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said the U.S. was still working with Algeria‘s government to gain a fuller understanding of the attack and to enhance their counterterrorism cooperation in future.

“We extend our deepest condolences to their families and friends,” she said in a statement. “The blame for this tragedy rests with the terrorists who carried it out, and the United States condemns their actions in the strongest possible terms.”

Last week’s desert siege began Wednesday when Mali-based, Al Qaeda-linked militants attempted to hijack two buses at the plant, were repelled, and then seized the gas refinery. They said the attack was retaliation for France‘s recent military intervention against Islamist rebels in neighboring Mali, but the captured militants told Algerian officials it took two months to plan.

Five Americans had been taken out of the country before Saturday’s final assault by Algerian forces against the militants.

The U.S. official said the remaining two Americans survived the four-day crisis at an insecure oil rig at the facility. They were flown out to London on Saturday.

The State Department‘s Nuland confirmed that seven Americans made it out safely, but said she couldn’t provide further details because of privacy considerations.

Algeria says 38 hostages of all nationalities and 29 militants died in the standoff. Five foreign workers remain unaccounted for.

Lovelady, 57, worked at Ain Amenas as a project manager for the Houston-based energy firm ENGlobal Corporation, said CEO William A. Coskey. Rowan’s employer wasn’t immediately known.

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List of dead and missing from raid at Algerian gas plant

At least 81 people have been reported dead, including 32 Islamist militants, after a bloody, four-day hostage situation at Algeria‘s remote Ain Amenas natural gas plant. Nearly two dozen foreign workers remained unaccounted for late Sunday.

Here’s the latest information from Algeria on the dead and missing:

THE DEAD:

— 32 Islamist militants, according to the Algerian government.

— 23 hostages, according to Algeria.

— 25 more bodies found Sunday, unclear yet whether they were hostages or militants, according to an Algerian security official.

— 1 Romanian died in the hospital, after being evacuated.

— Confirmed dead so far include six from the Philippines, three from Britain, two from Romania and one each from the U.S. and France.

THE MISSING HOSTAGES

— JAPAN: 10 Japanese working at the plant are unaccounted for, according to their employer JGC Corp.

— NORWAY: Five Norwegian employees of Statoil are still missing, the energy company said Sunday.

— BRITAIN: Three other Britons still missing and feared dead, the U.K. government said Sunday. Another British resident also feared dead.

— THE PHILIPPINES: Four Filipinos are still missing, a government spokesman said in Manila.

— MALAYSIA: Two Malaysians are missing, the government says.

— UNITED STATES: The number of possible American hostages is still unclear. One Texan is dead, the U.S. has confirmed. The militants at first said they were holding seven American hostages, but there has been no official confirmation if any Americans are unaccounted for.

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Al-Qaida flourishes in Sahara, emerges stronger

The Islamists are back as a force in Algeria.

The terrorist attack on an Algerian natural gas plant that left dozens of hostages and militants dead has demonstrated how a failing Algerian insurgency transformed itself into a regional threat, partly by exploiting the turmoil unleashed by the Arab Spring revolts.

Al-Qaida’s branch in Algeria retreated into a Sahara no man’s land between Mali, Algeria and Mauritania after it was largely defeated by the Algerian army in a 10-year war in the 1990s that claimed 200,000 lives. There it grew rich on smuggling and hostage-taking, gained new recruits and re-emerged stronger than ever, armed with looted high-tech weapons from Libya‘s 2011 civil war.

The audacious assault last Wednesday on Algeria‘s Ain Amenas gas complex by a multinational band of Islamists shows how long-simmering ethnic tensions in Mali, a civil war in Algeria and a revolution in Libya have combined to create a conflict spanning the deserts and savannahs of both North Africa and West Africa.

Algeria‘s Islamists were driven south into the desert by the military’s brutal counterinsurgency tactics — a take-no-prisoners approach vividly on display in the resolution of the latest hostage crisis.

Factions of Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb became rich in the lawless desert by smuggling guns, drugs and cigarettes and by kidnapping foreigners for ransom. Soon they became involved in the longstanding disputes of the desert Tuareg against the government in Mali, whom the tribesmen felt ignored or abused them.

One of their prominent leaders was Moktar Belmoktar, who made millions smuggling and kidnapping and went on to mastermind the attack on the Ain Amenas plant.

While taking up the Tuareg cause in northern Mali, these al-Qaida-allied groups decided to use their new-found strength to settle scores against old opponents like Algeria and the West.

“It seems that Moktar has tasked himself with the internationalization of the Mali conflict,” said William Lawrence, the North African analyst for the International Crisis Group. “There’s no question there is struggle between different groups in the Sahel and Sahara to have the upper hand in claiming the jihad mantle in the region.”

Belmoktar fell out with the local al-Qaida franchise, the Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), and formed his own northern Mali-based group in December called the Masked Brigade. He promised to attack those threatening the radical Islamist mini-state that was emerging in northern Mali.

“We threaten everyone who participated in and planned for the aggression against our Muslim people due to their implementation of Islamic Shariah law on our land,” he announced in December on jihadi websites. “You will taste the heat of war in your countries and we will attack your interests.”

With the money to be made in smuggling and kidnapping, all that was missing was easy access to heavy weaponry. That changed in 2011, and weapons came cascading across the borders when Libya fell apart and dictator Moammar Gadhafi’s vast arsenals of oil-bought weapons were looted.

What began in January 2012 as a secular revolt of disaffected Tuaregs hoping to carve out a homeland in northern Mali was soon hijacked by al-Qaida and allied extremist groups.

With their new weapons, money and men, Algerian militants like Belmoktar could now do what had never been possible before — hit oil-rich Algeria‘s strategic energy infrastructure in the remote desert.

National borders were no impediment to these heavily armed fighters in four-wheel drive vehicles.

AQIM and other militant Islamist groups’ control over northern Mali and weak security along Libya‘s borders has provided the organization with greater operational freedom,” noted Arun Pillai-Essex, an analyst with Maplecroft, a risk analysis group, who said AQIM has also been able to capture weapons from the Libyan and Malian armies.

The question now is where the Islamists will strike next.

Another attack on an Algerian energy installation is doubtful, analysts say. Already heavily guarded, security will no doubt be vastly increased and there are suggestions that the Ain Amenas attack only succeeded by having some type of inside help.

France and its Western allies fear AQIM could metastasize its terrorism into Europe if left unchecked.

In the last two weeks, France has been taking the fight to AQIM with punishing air strikes against the vast territory the group controls in northern Mali — raising questions about whether the group’s fighters will have much time to think about new terror attacks.

“It is one-off episode, they got lucky,” said Riccardo Fabiani, North Africa analyst of the Eurasia group. “I would think that the next attacks are going to target other countries. Mauritania could be an easy target, Morocco or any ECOWAS country or possibly in Libya.”

The attack has also pushed France and Algeria — two nations with fraught relations due to bloody colonial ties — closer together over the need to combat these groups.

Prior to the attack, Algeria had long publicly opposed France‘s call for armed intervention to deal with the rise of extremist groups in northern Mali, citing the threat to regional stability and the chances of the crisis spilling over into its own desert regions.

Now, with the fight brought to Algeria‘s doorstep, al-Qaida-linked groups will be facing their old implacable enemy once more.

Unlike other Western nations, French officials refused to criticize Algeria for its strong-fisted handling of the Ain Amenas hostage ordeal.

“When a country is attacked in this way, and its own sovereignty is jeopardized, it decides on how to respond with its own army,” French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said Sunday on France-5 TV.

Throwing more military operations at al-Qaida, however, is not going to solve the underlying problem, warned Lawrence, the North Africa analyst.

“This is linked to the Libyan conflict, it’s linked to the Mali conflict, it’s linked to 50 years of struggle by the Tuareg, it’s linked to 20 years of struggle in Algeria,” he said.

Ultimately, he says, the countries of North and West Africa, not to mention Europe, will have to address the conditions that allowed al-Qaida to flourish in this impoverished region.

“A security response is at best a partial response. Until a robust political, humanitarian and economic effort is implemented, the security effort won’t solve these problems,” Lawrence said.

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Schemm reported from Rabat, Morocco.

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