News on Top Five suspected members of the Islamist group
which held foreign and local workers hostage at an Algerian gas plant
have been arrested, reports say.
The reports came a day after the
Algerian authorities said all 32 hostage-takers had been killed at the
In Amenas gas installation.
At least 25 bodies were found at the complex on Sunday, reports say.
It is unclear whether they were captors or captives. Officials say a definitive death toll will be released later.
On
Saturday officials said least 23 staff at the facility had died during
the four-day siege, with some Western workers still unaccounted for.
The siege was ended in a raid by troops on Saturday.
Officials said the army launched its assault after Islamist militants began killing foreign hostages.
UK Prime Minister David Cameron and US President Barack Obama have blamed "terrorists" for the hostages' deaths.
And on Sunday French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian described the hostage-taking as an "act of war".
"What
strikes me the most is that we're saying 'hostage-taking' but when
there are so many people concerned, I think this is an act of war," he
told French TV.
'Talks call'
"Five terrorists were found still alive this morning," said the private Ennahar TV channel, quoted by AFP news agency.
The
agency said residents of the nearby town of In Amenas were staying
indoors, amid rumours that the army operation to end the siege was not
over.
Algerian Communications Minister Mohammed Said said earlier
that the militants were from six different countries, "nationals of
Arab and African countries, and of non-African countries".
Mr Said added that a final death toll would be released in the coming hours.
Mauritanian
website Sahara Media says Mokhtar Belmokhtar, the suspected organiser
of the siege, has claimed responsibility for it in a video message.
The
website said the video - recorded on 17 January while the siege was
still going on but not posted on the website - showed the militant
leader saying he was prepared to negotiate with Western and Algerian
leaders if operations against Islamists in Mali were stopped.
Three Britons are confirmed dead, and a further three are missing, feared dead.
UK officials were "working hard" to locate the missing, said Foreign Secretary William Hague.
"Everything seems to indicate" that a Colombian citizen resident in the UK is among the dead, the Colombian president has said.
But he added that information about Carlos Estrada, who worked for BP, was "not 100%".
Japanese
officials said they had no confirmation of the fate of 10 nationals who
remained unaccounted for, despite reports that nine had died.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Yoshihide Suga said a government aircraft would be sent to bring home seven others who had survived.
Two Malaysians are unaccounted for, as are five Norwegians.
State
news agency APS said 685 Algerian workers and 107 out of 132 foreigners
working at the plant had been freed, citing interior ministry figures.
The nationalities of some of the hostages killed are still not known.
Well-planned assault
The
crisis began on Wednesday when militants attacked two buses carrying
foreign workers to the remote site in south-eastern Algeria. A Briton
and an Algerian reportedly died in the incident.
The militants then took Algerians and expatriates hostage at the complex, which was quickly surrounded by the Algerian army.
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.
However, France only decided last week to
intervene militarily in Mali. Analysts say the assault on the gas
facility was well-planned and would have required advance research, as
well as possibly inside help.
The leader of the hostage-takers
was a veteran fighter from Niger, named as Abdul Rahman al-Nigeri by the
Mauritanian news agency ANI, which had been in contact with the
militants.
Sunday, 20 January 2013
News On Top Five suspected members of the Islamist group which held foreign and local workers hostage at an Algerian gas plant have been arrested,
23:57
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