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Africa North
Algerian terror leaders call for end to al-Qaeda violence, kidnapping
2010-07-17
[Maghrebia] Othmane Touati and Samir Moussaab, two former leaders of Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), on Thursday (July 15th) urged their ex-comrades to stop their "crimes" and promised reconciliation for those who renounce terrorism.

Authorities set up a meeting between the former terrorists and reporters from five newspapers in order to read the contents of a letter to the "remaining armed elements in mountains" dated May 31st.

The letter by Touati, a former member of Al-Qaeda's Council of Notables who is also known as Abou El-Abbes, demands that the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC) stop its crimes, both planned and under way, against the Algerian people.

"I realize that the path that I was following was not the right path, based on respected ancient and modern scholars' fatwas on the illegality of jihad in our country", said Touati, a GSPC founder and long-time "right hand" to AQIM chief Abdelmalek Droukdel.

He said the terrorist organisation is facing some internal deteriorations.

AQIM has suffered a string of defections in recent months that includes terrorist Grig-Ahsine Abdelhalim, an Algiers native who joined the GSPC in 1994 after escaping from Batna's Tazoult prison. AQIM medical committee head Mokadem Lounis, aka Abou Naamane, surrendered in mid-April, as did former El-Farouk brigade emir Ahmed Mansouri Ahmed, aka Abdeldjebbar.

Those who still embrace jihad should review the approach of armed struggle, said Touati, who was once responsible for co-ordinating terrorist operations in Algeria's Boumerdes, Tizi-Ouzou and Bouira provinces.

Several armed elements who were active in AQIM are planning to issue a review that includes criticism of Al-Qaeda methods such as kidnapping and the killing of Muslims, said Touati.

"I urge my brothers to review their ways... and to think about the consequences of their behaviour", added the former terrorist, who surrendered to authorities on May 26th with the help of his wife and Moussaab.

Moussaab, who was believed to have died in a confrontation with the Algerian army in April 2007, surrendered after a hospital stay that followed the clash.

The former GSPC chief of staff promised reconciliation for those who leave the mountains, telling reporters: "Just as we were the reason for their ascent to the mountains, we will be the cause for them to come back down for reconciliation".

Moussaab appealed to religious scholars who once issued fatwas on the legitimacy of jihad, only to revise that opinion, to reach out to insurgents. He pointed to scholars such as Abdelkader Ben Abdel Aziz, the ideologue of al-Qaeda who recanted his fatwas on the legitimacy of jihad in the land of Islam.

Moussaab also called on Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG) leaders and their scholars, such as Khudair Khodr and Nasser Fahd, to convince those still in the mountains to come back to the "right path".

These appeals build on religious reviews and previous appeals made by former leading terrorists, particularly the December 2009 calls by GSPC founding member Hassan Hattab.

Mohammed Mesloub, a researcher on Islamist movements, told Magharebia that disseminating "rational revisions for the jihad groups, as is the case with the [LIFG], would be more effective than visiting scholars and preachers, because the Algerian jihadists have common values with the other jihadists of the Maghreb region".

Hussein Boulahya, a media expert on Islamist groups, called the ideological revisions made by former GSPC leaders "only a prelude" to a series of revisions that ex-insurgents are preparing to release criticising "the approach of the GSPC and al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb".

He said that such revisions by prominent former terrorist leaders "will have a positive effect in speeding up the repentance of armed elements who're reluctant to lay down their arms, not because of their belief in the legitimacy of jihad in Algeria, but because of fears of being exposed to violence".

"The fact that leaders of the organisation have not been subjected to any harm may remove some concerns," added Boulahya.

Local press reports quote Algerian officials as saying that for over 9 months, security forces have been pursuing a new initiative for reconciliation and the dismantling of terrorist cells.

Some active terrorists and prisoners who have credibility with their comrades have become part of communications taking place since last March, under a heavy veil of confidentiality, said the authorities. This led to an agreement that would grant the terrorist prisoners conveniences in their cells as a prelude to their release, in exchange for their participation in convincing their former comrades to repent and issuing intellectual and doctrinal reviews.

In recent months, under this scheme, authorities have brought the families of active terrorists to meet with them, including relatives of alleged terrorist Yahya Jouwadi, the commander of the desert Emirate.

The daily Algeria News on July 6th reported that prisoners connected to this aspect of the fight against terrorism will be released in the next few months under a "deal" to bring AQIM terrorists, including Amar Saifi and his comrade Gharika Noureddine, into the fold of national reconciliation.

The paper also reported that 50 terrorists who are entitled to presidential pardons have been chosen within the framework of recent months' behind-the-scenes negotiations, with the participation of former GSPC leader Hattab.
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Africa North
Abderrezak El Para joins movement for Algerian reconciliation
2009-05-13
[Maghrebia] The number of GSPC leaders choosing to support reconciliation efforts in Algeria is growing. At a meeting on Thursday (May 7th) in Algiers, GSPC founding members Omar Abdelbari, Abu Zakaria, Moussaab Abu Daoud, and Abu Amar Hadhifa announced that Amar Saifi -- aka Abderrezak El Para -- has joined the cause for national peace.

The commanders showed Magharebia a letter from El Para, who has been in detention since October 2004, that clearly states his intent.

In the letter, El Para acknowledges the efforts of GSPC founder Hassan Hattab to end the fighting in Algeria.

"I'm sorry for what I have done, and I have prayed to God that those who remain in the underground will feel the same," he writes. "Hassan Hattab's action is laudable, as he has put the interest of the nation, an end to the spilling of Algerian blood and an end to fitna, above all other considerations."

El Para calls into question decisions by current leader Abdelmalek Droukdel that led to "the spilling of Muslim blood in crowded public places, without any distinction between young and old, man and woman, through bombings, under the pretext of targeting government institutions".

He goes on to state that his position "is not dictated by the current situation, but arises from a deep conviction... God has saved me by removing me from the arena of armed conflict, so that I could take a look at myself and what has been done by the group (GSPC) since it was created," he writes.

"I realised that the action taken in our country has caused a lot of tragedy for our people and it would be difficult to avoid excesses, as was the case in the past with the GIA and is now the case with the GSPC."

El Para closed with an appeal to the terrorists still in hiding: "It's our duty to convince those who remain in the underground... [they] must pull themselves together and ask: are their actions jihad? The truth is that these acts have nothing to do with Islam or Muslims."

He writes that he and Hassan Hattab "already warned of this, by withdrawing from the GIA in 1996 and denouncing its criminal acts".

Discussing their motivation to join the peace movement, the four commanders said in the meeting that their initiative is a response to appeals from ulemas in Algeria and abroad for an end to violence in the country. Their voices join that of Hassan Hattab and countless others who want to see peace re-established.

This appeal, the four told Magharebia, will not be the last. They are continuing their efforts to convince those who are still involved in underground operations to lay down their weapons.

The former comrades of Droukdel said that they know the character of the remaining fighters better than anyone. They are working in the community to raise awareness among the families of terrorists and most importantly to discourage young people who might be tempted by the underground. They use their firsthand experience to describe the bitter realities of life in al-Qaeda, and talk about the benefits of the Charter for National Reconciliation.

According to Omar Abdelbari, former GSPC communications officer, the appeal has been broadcast far and wide and must have reached the underground. Nevertheless, he said the four know they will have to wait to see the fruits of their work in the community.

As for the men still fighting, former GSPC medical officer Abu Zakaria said that many still have concerns they want answered before making a decision.

"The armed elements are waiting for the government to open the door to them, to open up lines of communication. There needs to be a guarantee that these people will receive social assistance," he said.

"We need to cap the well of terrorism if the underground is to feel the impact."

Abdelbari has the same aim. "Those who are fighting in the underground will judge by what happens to those who turn themselves in," he said.

For Moussaab Abu Daoud, the project begun by Hattab required careful consideration. He held a meeting with leaders in "Zone 9", his region of responsibility in the GSPC. "We handed over a list of those who wanted to lay down their weapons to the security forces," he said. "We are still working to bring the remaining elements back into society. People have come to see us and have been convinced by our appeal."

Abu Daoud also revealed that he had sent intermediaries to meet Abu El Abbas (Mokhtar Belmokhtar) to try to convince him to lay down his weapons.

He also criticised Droukdel for blind adherence to al-Qaeda doctrine. "The ideas being spread by al-Qaeda [in Iraq] are taken up again here. Even the attacks they committed have been copied. Look at the attack on the UN headquarters: who could have imagined that? No one. It's an unthinking imitation of al-Qaeda's actions."

Finally, Abu Daoud encouraged the lingering armed elements to accept the terms of reconciliation. "The fact that we are in the midst of society -- that we can move around in total freedom -- is in itself palpable proof for those who are still reluctant to stand down."
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Africa North
Former Algerian terror chiefs call for an end to jihad
2009-05-10
Former terror chiefs have called on Al Qaeda-linked insurgents battling Algerian authorities to lay down their arms and benefit from a pardon, media reported Saturday.

Authorities are trying to persuade an estimated 500 active militants linked to Al Qaeda to lay down their arms. President Abdelaziz Bouteflika hinted repeatedly during his re-election campaign last month that he would consider a general amnesty for those renouncing violence.

The three were formerly members of the Salafist Group for Call and Combat, or GSPC, one of the armed factions that battled Algerian authorities in the 1990s. Up to an estimated 200,000 people have been killed in the violence that erupted in 1992 — now sporadic but deadly. They called on militants not to "blindly follow the actions of Al Qaeda" in the message published Saturday by Algerian newspapers — an unprecedented appeal by such high-profile leaders.

A letter was also read, allegedly written by Amar Saifi, known as Abderrazak El Para, a notorious detained terror chief held responsible for the 2003 desert kidnapping of 32 European tourists, mainly Germans. "The jihad has no reason to continue," read the purported letter from El Para, once a special forces paratrooper. There was no way to independently verify that the letter read in El Para's name was written by him.

The enigmatic El Para was caught by rebels in a remote desert region of Chad in 2004 then transferred to Libya. He was transferred again to Algeria and remains in detention. The daily Liberte said he could face trial for leading attacks that killed dozens of soldiers. "I regret what I've done, and I pray God that those still fighting do the same," El Para was quoted as saying in the letter read by Omar Abdelber, a former GSPC spokesman.

The group appeal by the three was first broadcast Friday by national radio. Abou Zakaria, a former GSPC medical operations chief, claimed he was working with authorities to ensure judicial and financial guarantees for terrorists who choose to "reintegrate society." The third former terrorist making the appeal was Mosaab Abou Daoud, a former field commander. The former insurgents said kidnappings, including those of two Western tourists currently held in neighboring Mali, are "a barbarity" that does not serve Islam.
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Africa North
El Para excluded from reconciliation measures
2006-09-09
Reliable sources said that Amar Saifi one of Salafist Group of Preaching and Combat (GSPC)’s leaders is excluded from national reconciliation provisions owing to his involvement in international terrorism and being wanted by foreign security services. Whereas other sources mentioned that two other prominent GSPC members joined their families in conformity with the Charter’s provisions.
The sources told el Khabar that the Saifi, called Abderezzak el Para, is not covered by peace law measures that expired last 31st August, pointing out that its “international terrorist activity exclude him from that provisions” adding “he is under international warrant of arrest, for that reason” alluding to a federal prosecution international warrant of arrest, after the 32 European tourists abduction case taking place in the Algerian Sahara in 2003 spring, and released in counterparts of a 5 million euros ransom paid by Germany.

Note recalling that Libyan security services extradited Saifi to their Algerian counterparts in October 2004 thanks to a ransom paid to the Chadian opponent armed organisation who hold him to hostage. In a connected context, well informed sources unveiled that two GSPC prominent members joined their families, by virtue of the Charter’s provisions, namely Khettab, called “Abu Omar Abdebir” a former GSPC information committee official as well as Amer Saidi called “Abu Bilal Al Albani” former foreign affairs committee head, who surrendered last December, and recovered they ordinary life few days earlier after being qualified to benefit from peace measures. This was considered by the sources as a message to GSPC leadership, as an evidence of power good will to bide by the charter’s provisions widely approved by the Algerian people.
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Africa North
2 GSPC leaders urge group to surrender
2006-02-04
Two leading members of the Salafist Group of Preaching and Combat (GSPC) , namely Mourad Khattab known alias "Abu Omar Abdelbar" and Amar Saidi alias "Abu Bilal Elwalbani", who has surrendered to security services, last December, in the wilaya of Medea, has made a plea to all the armed groups to surrender. Urging them to give up and join national reconciliation of president Abdelaziz Bouteflika.

The plea was made yesterday on Radio Noble Quran, at 06:40 am.

The plea made to the members of the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat by Abu Omar Abdelbar from the commune of "Khemis Elkhechna", in the wilaya of "Boumerdes" and "Bilal Elwalbani" from the village "Ouelbane", in "Alkadiria", wilaya of "Bouira", lasted six minutes.

The first was responsible of information in the organization, led by "Abdelmalek Droudkal" alias "Abu Musab Abdelouadoud", and the second was in charge of internal and external communication.

Both of them were prominent members of the terrorist organization GSPC, whose surrender severely hit the Salafist group.

Note worthy that El Khabar has previously and exclusively published their surrender on the 3rd of January, but the Salafist group for preaching and combat denied, through a communique, the information saying that they were arrested by security services.

This detail was not made clear by the radio's appeal during which "Abu Omar Abdelbar" seemed very calm when urging the armed groups to give up. They have also recognized that many terrorists want to join national reconciliation in order to take advantage of amnesty's provisions.

From his part, Mourad Khettab has called his previous men to surrender saying that the operation was "very easy", he added then: "we have lost 10 years. It's a man's life period", insisting: "my call is real, and it is time you rescued yourselves".

They added that they have been convinced of the necessity to surrender following the fetwa by religion's doctors as Mohamed Nacereddine El Albani and sheikh Ben Othaymin.

Radio Noble Quran programmes covered Mauritania, Mali, Niger and Chad in addition to the Algerian Sahara in which there is a high terrorist movement, and the area experienced many terrorist operations as the foreign tourists' kidnaping, in 2004, by Amar Saifi alias Amar El Para, who is currently in prison after he was captured by the rebellious group in Chad and delivered by Libya to Algerian security services.
Link


Africa: Subsaharan
Chad Signs Peace Deal With Northern Rebels
2005-08-20
Chad's government has signed its third peace deal in three years with northern rebels in an effort to end a seven-year-old conflict in the region. The peace agreements of 2002 and 2003 collapsed amid mutual accusations of violations by both sides. Under the new deal signed Thursday, the government of President Idriss Deby and the Movement for Democracy and Justice in Chad agreed to stop fighting, integrate former rebels into the government and security forces and release prisoners of war. They also agreed to open all main roads and de-mine the region in three months. Smaller rebel factions in the central African nation, however, did not sign the agreement.

Chad's northern rebellion broke out in 1998 and flares up sporadically despite the previous peace agreements. The rebel group made international headlines earlier this year when it captured Amar Saifi, the second-most powerful man in an Algerian Islamist group which has pledged allegiance to al Qaida and is classed by the United States as a terrorist organization. Saifi, of the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat, was later handed over to Algerian authorities.
... thereby earning themselves a bit of legitimacy in our eyes...
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Africa: North
Imprisoned Islamic leaders in Mauritania launch hunger strike
2005-06-05
Dozens of Islamic leaders imprisoned in Mauritania launched a hunger strike on Saturday, demanding they be allowed to visit lawyers, doctors and family after more than a month behind bars, a lawyer for the group said. The men were arrested in late April by police who claimed they were part of a covert terror organization that had been sending members abroad to train with Algerian insurgents. They included Mohamed Hassan Ould Dedew, spiritual leader of many Islamic radicals in the desert nation. He was among two in the group who were reported ill and in need of medical care, said lawyer Mohamed Ahmed Ould Haj Sidi. Interior Ministry spokesman Sidi Yeslem Ould Amar Cheine denied Dedew was ill, however, saying ¢his health is being used as a pretext to change the normal course of justice."
"Ain't nothin' wrong with him! He's fine!"
"Urk! Gaaack!"
"See? He always says that when he's feelin' hale!"
In all, 51 Mauritanians were rounded up in Nouakchott, accused of being part of the covert terror group. Some 44 of them took part in Saturday's strike. Police said this week they had seized letters between some of those imprisoned and Amar Saifi, former chief of Algeria's Al Qaeda-linked Salafist Group for Call and Combat. Saifi, also known by his nom de guerre Al Para, was extradited from Libya to Algeria in 2004. He was the Sahara's most-wanted terror suspect and accused in the kidnapping of 32 European tourists in 2003.
Inconvenient, that, if true...
Islamic leaders in Mauritania have staunchly opposed the strict rule of President Maaoya Sid Ahmed Ould Taya - who has survived several coup attempts during his 20-year reign and cracked down ruthlessly against opponents, jailing scores of people.
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Africa: North
GSPC may be down, but it ain't out
2005-01-26
Algeria's top Islamic rebel group, which has ties to al Qaeda, is reeling from the arrests and killings of hundreds of members, but a deadly ambush on a military convoy shows it is far from eliminated.

The Jan. 3 attack by the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC) killed 13 soldiers and five militiamen, according to diplomats, and may mark the emergence of a dangerous new leader.

A U.S. military source familiar with the region said it looked like the work of Mokhtar Belmokhtar, a GSPC desert chief newly returned from hiding in northern Mali and keen to show that he is a force to be reckoned with. "Among all the GSPC folks that we know about, he's certainly the most active, certainly the most dangerous. He's the one that needs to be wrapped up next," the source told Reuters.

The deaths last year of 321 rebels, most of them GSPC, will boost foreign investor confidence in the OPEC member's ability to crack down on Islamist militancy. In 2004, the army stepped up its military offensive and was helped with intelligence obtained from those who surrendered or were captured. "Security is improving gradually and obviously 2004 was quite a bad year for the GSPC, losing its leader and many followers," said Sarah Meyers, a Middle East and North Africa analyst for London-based risk consultant Control Risks Group. But it will be a long process to eradicate its cells."

The security risk remains high, according to diplomats and security analysts, because of 300 to 500 armed and well-funded and trained rebels still operational across Algeria. Foreign firms and many embassies have heavy security. Despite the Jan. 3 ambush, Interior Minister Noureddine Zerhouni was upbeat in comments last week.

He insisted the Armed Islamic Group (GIA), a forerunner of the GSPC, had been dismantled and that "only a few pockets of GSPC terrorists remained" and would soon be crushed. "The battle is won but it's not over," he said on Jan. 12. The U.S. military source said the GIA, whose leader was recently arrested, was "on its last legs".

But the GSPC, which is designated by the State Department as a terrorist group and pledged support to al Qaeda in 2003, would continue to pose a residual threat for some time, drawing on grievances from the past decade's violent conflict. He praised the "magnificent job" of the Algerian authorities against the group, which almost fell apart last year with the death of leader Nabil Sahraoui and the arrest of deputy Amar Saifi, known as "El Para", who was behind the kidnapping of 32 European tourists in the desert in 2003.

The U.S. source said Algerian pressure against the GSPC had partly had —group has been significantly weakened and it will hurt their ability to carry out major attack against oil installations in the south or large-scale targets in the north. "But it will be more difficult for authorities to root them out in more remote areas because they are very skilled at carrying out attacks and then retreating to the mountains."

President Abdelaziz Bouteflika's government hopes many of the rebels have tired of the war and want to surrender, but the GSPC's die-hard leadership has repeatedly warned their members against giving up. "No truce, no dialogue, no reconciliation and no peace with the enemies of God," GSPC spokesman Abou Yasser Siaf said in a statement on Jan. 6.
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Africa: North
Al Para update
2004-11-05
BERLIN: Information from a captured fighter now in Algerian custody may help authorities there mop up the remnants of the country's leading Islamist militant group, a senior US military official said. Neighbours of the North African nation will also take a close interest in whatever intelligence Algeria can obtain from Amar Saifi, whom it accuses of "numerous terrorist crimes". Saifi was number two in the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC), which has pledged allegiance to Al Qaeda and is listed by the US as a terrorist organisation. He is also wanted in Germany in connection with the kidnapping of 32 European tourists in the Sahara last year. The ex-paratrooper had been held since March by a Cha­dian rebel group but Algeria announced last Thursday it had taken him into custody after he was intercepted in Libya.
"Gotcha!"
"He obviously not only knows a lot, he probably holds the key to the kingdom — if he were willing to talk, he could probably tell them everything they needed to know to roll up most of the remaining folks," the US official said. He said nations like Mali and Niger, Algeria's neighbours in the largely desert Sahel region of north Africa, would also be keen to learn who Saifi was working with in their countries. He declined to answer directly when asked if the United States itself would seek access to Saifi, also known as Abderrezak Al Para. "Obviously we're interested but that is strictly an Algerian affair."
"No comment."
The military official said Saifi's handover was an "enormous victory" for the region, where US Marines and special forces have trained local armies in four nations this year as part of a strategy to help Africa boost its defences in the war on terror.
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Africa: North
Muammar coughs up Saifi
2004-11-02
One of the wealthiest and most powerful armed Islamists in north Africa, Amar Saifi, was yesterday behind bars in his home country of Algeria following the intervention of Libya's Muammar Gadafy. Saifi was the number two in Algeria's main violent Islamist organisation, the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC), and responsible for the kidnapping of 32 foreign tourists in the Sahara desert last year. His group had pledged allegiance to Osama bin Laden and he ran, in effect, a private army that roamed across the desert frontiers of several north African states.

Mr Gadafy received praise from Washington for handing over Saifi to the Algerian government. "This continues to show Libya's reintegration into world society and coming down on the side of law and order and the war on terrorism," a senior US military official told Reuters at the weekend. Saifi was reported to have been captured several months ago by a rebel, non-Islamist group from Chad, and it was unclear how he turned up in Libya last week. Press reports around the region have speculated either that Mr Gadafy threatened the Chad group with air attacks, or that he paid it for Saifi. Last year Saifi was reported to have extracted €5m (£3.5m) from the German government in return for the release of 32 tourists kidnapped while on adventure holidays in the Algerian Sahara. A German woman died of heatstroke in captivity and German authorities had put out an international search warrant for Saifi.
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Africa: North
US sees Algerian militants on run
2004-11-01
Information from a captured fighter now in Algerian custody may help authorities there mop up the remnants of the country's leading Islamist militant group, a senior US military official said.
Neighbours of the North African nation will also take a close interest in whatever intelligence Algeria can obtain from Amar Saifi, whom it accuses of "numerous terrorist crimes".
Saifi was number two in the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC), which has pledged allegiance to Al Qaeda and is listed by the US as a terrorist organisation. He is also wanted in Germany in connection with the kidnapping of 32 European tourists in the Sahara last year.
The ex-paratrooper had been held since March by a Chadian rebel group but Algeria announced last Thursday it had taken him into custody after he was intercepted in Libya.
"He obviously not only knows a lot, he probably holds the key to the kingdom — if he were willing to talk, he could probably tell them everything they needed to know to roll up most of the remaining folks," the US official said.
He said nations like Mali and Niger, Algeria's neighbours in the largely desert Sahel region of north Africa, would also be keen to learn who Saifi was working with in their countries.
He declined to answer directly when asked if the United States itself would seek access to Saifi, also known as Abderrezak Al Para. "Obviously we're interested but that is strictly an Algerian affair."
The military official said Saifi's handover was an "enormous victory" for the region, where US Marines and special forces have trained local armies in four nations this year as part of a strategy to help Africa boost its defences in the war on terror.
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Africa: North
Libya Hands "El Para" Over To Algeria
2004-10-28
Algeria has taken custody of one of its most wanted terror suspects, handed over by Libya, the government says. Amar Saifi, known as ' Abderrezak El Para ' is accused of being behind last year's kidnapping of 32 tourists from Germany and elsewhere in Europe. The Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC) he leads is allegedly linked to al-Qaeda. He was reportedly arrested in March by rebels in Chad. It is not clear how he fell into Libyan hands.
Interesting just how many of these "deals" with rebel groups Libya pulls off.
In July, the rebel Movement for Democracy and Justice in Chad (MDJC) said that Libya had threatened to bomb their positions unless he was handed over.
"Speak softly and carry a big bombload" really does get attention.
The GSPC is one of the last groups fighting a 12-year civil war in Algeria, in which some 150,000 people have been killed. Germany issued an international warrant for his arrest in September 2003. The warrant accuses him of kidnapping, extortion, membership of a foreign terrorist organisation and attempted blackmail of the German government. Germany is reported to have paid a ransom for the hostages, but the government has refused to confirm or deny this.
Which means "Yes" in diplospeak.
The tourists were captured in small groups during a spate of kidnappings in the Sahara desert. All but one of the hostages - a German woman who died of heat stroke - were freed.
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