Africa North |
Al-Qaeda commander Abu Zeid killed in Mali |
2013-03-01 |
[Egypt Independent] French forces in Mali have killed Abdelhamid Abu Zeid, a leading field commander of Al-Qaeda's North Africa wing AQIM, Algerian Ennahar television reported on Thursday. The station said 40 Islamic fascisti including Abu Zeid were killed in the region of Tigargara in northern Mali three days ago. A French Defense Ministry official declined to comment on the report. Algeria did not confirm the killing. La Belle France launched a whirlwind assault to retake Mali's vast northern desert region from AQIM and other Salafist tough guys on 11 January after a plea from Mali's caretaker government. The military intervention dislodged the rebels from several main towns they had occupied and drove them back into desert wilds. AQIM, which stands for Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, has earned tens of millions of dollars in ransom payments for Western hostages taken to its strongholds in northern Mali. Abu Zeid has been regarded as one of AQIM's most ruthless operators. He is believed to have executed British national Edwin Dyer in 2009 and a 78-year-old Frenchie, Michel Germaneau, in 2010. Canadian diplomat Robert Fowler, in an account of his kidnapping by another Islamist cell in the Sahara, recounted how Abou Zeid refused to give medication to two hostages suffering from dysentery, one of whom had been stung by a scorpion. |
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Africa North |
AQIM cells vie for control of Spanish hostages |
2010-08-16 |
[Maghrebia] Radical al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) cell leader Abdelhamid Abu Zeid "is doing everything possible to endanger the lives" of the two Spanish hostages held by another AQIM branch in the northern Mali desert, a Malian negotiator told AFP on Saturday (August 14th). Algerian national Abu Zeid, who was responsible for beheading British hostage Edwin Dyer in 2009, is reportedly pressuring rival AQIM cell leader Mokhtar Belmokhtar (aka Lâaouar) not to release humanitarian aid workers Albert Vilalta and Roque Pascual. The men were kidnapped last November in Mauritania and are now in the hands of Belmokhtar's group. In related news, Malian national Omar Sid'Ahmed Ould Hamma (aka Omar Sahraoui), whose 12-year forced labour sentence for kidnapping the Spaniards was upheld last week by a Nouakchott court, will be extradited to his home country, Journal Tahalil reported on Saturday. |
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Africa North |
Droukdal claims to have negotiated with Paris |
2010-08-05 |
![]() "Shame on France and its president, who launched their raids while negotiations were under way," said the head of AQIM in this audio message, of which excerpts had already been released July 25 by the Al- Jazeera Channel to announce the execution of the hostage. The French authorities never reported negotiations to free the hostage. Thus, on July 26, the French Minister of Defense, Herve Morin, had indicated that Paris could not have "any discussion" with the kidnappers of Michel Germaneau. " The death of Michael Germaneau is announced through an ultimatum (launched July 11) without any discussion", said Mr. Morin. "We never had any specific demands. They even refused any discussion for the delivery of drugs that Michel Germaneau needed for his heart problems," added the French minister. In the full version of the message, the leader of AQIM has also confirmed that six members of his group were killed during the operation launched by the Mauritanian army against AQIM's in the desert of Mali, with logistical support of France who wanted to try to free the hostage. Michel Germaneau was held by a cell led by Algerian AQIM Abdelhamid Abu Zeid, described as "violent and brutal", which had already executed, 13 months ago, a British hostage, Edwin Dyer, who was kidnapped six months before. London had refused to yield to the demands of AQIM, which demanded the British to work for the release of several members of the organization prisoners in the Sahel. These same requirements were made by AQIM, which also holds two Spanish-hostages to guarantee the life of Michel Germaneau. Following the announcement of his execution, French President Nicolas Sarkozy had promised that this "barbaric act" would not remain unpunished. "They murdered in cold blood a person of 78, sick, to whom they refused to send the drugs he needed," he declared in a televised speech. "I condemn this barbaric act, that heinous act that made an innocent victim who devoted his time helping local people," he had said following a meeting of a council of security and defense attended by ministry officials and intelligence. The death of the French hostage has been the subject of numerous condemnations including those of Washington and the European Union who have denounced a "cowardly act". Three French hostages are still abroad since the end of 2009: an intelligence officer in Somalia and two journalists in Afghanistan. |
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Africa North |
Western hostages reportedly held by different AQIM cells in Mali |
2010-01-13 |
[Maghrebia] The six Europeans kidnapped in Mauritania and Mali since November are currently being held by three different al-Qaeda groups in the northern Mali desert, Journal Tahalil reported on Monday (January 11th), citing Malian security sources and the AFP Bamako bureau. Frenchman Pierre Camatte is being held by radical Algerian AQIM emir Abdelhamid Abu Zeid, responsible for beheading British hostage Edwin Dyer last June. The three Spanish humanitarian aid workers abducted in Mauritania last November are reportedly in the hands of Algerian Mokhtar Belmokhtar, aka Lâaouar. According to Algerian daily Ennahar, however, they are with Abu Zeid's more "dangerous" faction. The Italian couple is held by Abu Yahya Amane, "a lieutenant of Abu Zeid, wishing to mark his own territory", the security source said. |
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