Inteligencia y Seguridad Frente Externo En Profundidad Economia y Finanzas Transparencia
  En Parrilla Medio Ambiente Sociedad High Tech Contacto
Inteligencia y Seguridad  
 
04/03/2013 | Africa - Algeria: Mokhtar Belmokhtar's death 'could have repercussions for French hostages'

Ruth Sherlock

The death of Mokhtar Belmokhtar, the jihadist mastermind behind the Algerian gas plant siege in January, could have dangerous repercussions for French hostages held by Islamist militants, experts have warned.

 

The lives of the 15 French hostages held in Africa, and especially those of seven captured in northern Mali who may be being used as human shields, could be seriously endangered if the jihadist leader is confirmed dead.

"This is a rumour that is enormously worrying for the families and those of us who support them," Didier Beguin from the support committee for four French hostages abducted by radical Islamists in Niger in September 2010, said..

In an announcement on Chadian national television on Saturday night military spokesperson Gen. Zakaria Ngobongue said Belmokhtar was among those killed after troops "completely destroyed a terrorist base" in the north of Mali.

Other reports also claimed the death of Adelhamid Abou Zeid, a senior figure Al-Qaeda in the Magreb (AQIM).

French forces and other allies fighting in the country have been unable to confirm the killings. Belmokhtar's death has been proclaimed in the past, and conclusive positive identification may yet take days or weeks.

William Hague, the Foreign Secretary, also stressed that the killing was unconfirmed, but added that if it were true "it would be a blow to terrorism and to the criminal network around this man and other people".

Belmokhtar, 40 became the target of an international manhunt after he claimed responsibility for the attack at the In Amenas gas complex in eastern Algeria that led to the death of at least 37 hostages, including six Britons.

An Algerian national and an ally of former al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden from his days of fighting in Afghanistan – the nexus from which many of today's global jihadists were formed- this one-eyed terrorist broke away from AQIM to form his own group, chillingly called 'Signatories in Blood'.

Despite his religious extremism, the terrorist gained the nickname "Malboro Man" after it emerged that he had funded his jihad by smuggling cigarettes, as well as through financial extortion and kidnapping.

The announcements came as allies continued attacks on AQIM in the mountains of northern Mali.

On Sunday France said a soldier from the First Parachute Chasseur Regiment was killed in the fighting. It is the third fatality suffered by France since the beginning of the war in mid-January. Some 50 rebel fighters were also reportedly killed since Friday.

Telegraph (Reino Unido)

 


Otras Notas Relacionadas... ( Records 11 to 20 of 44138 )
fecha titulo
25/03/2020 Agentina - Informe de Coyuntura semanal (versión corta) al 24 de marzo sobre la situación política y económica argentina
22/02/2019 Análisis de coyuntura: El plan RenovAr estructural en la política climática
22/02/2019 How Belt and Road Is Upending the Beijing Consensus
31/01/2019 South Korea’s Hydrogen Economy Ambitions
15/01/2019 Una verdad incómoda
09/01/2019 2019: nubes en el horizonte para las energías renovables en A. Latina
26/12/2018 Análisis: El cambio climático revitaliza la opción nuclear
21/11/2018 La segunda revolución renovable de América Latina
26/10/2018 ¿Ideología o pragmatismo? La encrucijada en el sector energético
24/10/2018 US Shale Has A Glaring Problem – Analysis


Otras Notas del Autor
fecha
Título
24/07/2013|
06/08/2012|
18/07/2011|
18/07/2011|

ver + notas
 
Center for the Study of the Presidency
Freedom House