Prepare for higher body count – Algeria
2013-01-21 08:43
In Amenas - Algeria warned other nations to prepare on Monday
for a higher body count from a hostage bloodbath at a gas plant that was
overrun in what France called an "act of war" by Islamist militants.
Algerian troops on Sunday reportedly found the bodies of 25
hostages and captured five kidnappers at the In Amenas gas plant, deep in the
Sahara desert, a day after storming the remaining part of the complex still in
militant hands.
Governments scrambled to track down missing citizens as more
details emerged after the final showdown between special forces and extremists
who had taken hundreds hostage, demanding an end to French military
intervention in Mali.
Dozens of hostages appear to have died. Survivors' photos
seen by AFP showed bodies riddled with bullets, some with their heads half
blown away by the impact of the gunfire.
"They were brutally executed," said an Algerian
who identified himself as Brahim, after escaping the ordeal, referring to
Japanese victims gunned down by the hostage-takers.
Witnesses have said nine Japanese people connected to plant
builder JGC were killed in the 72-hour ordeal. One Japanese man who survived
gave a chilling account published Monday in the Daily Yomiuri newspaper.
The unidentified man was quoted as telling colleagues how
the gunmen had dragged him from his barricaded room, handcuffed him and
executed two hostages standing nearby.
"I was prepared to die," he said, before his
captors abandoned him and other hostages who had been bundled into a vehicle
that came under a hail of bullets. He then trudged for an hour through the
desert to safety.
Act of war
At least 23 foreigners and Algerians had been confirmed
killed since the crisis erupted on Wednesday.
Ennahar television reported that the bodies of 25 hostages
were found on Sunday by security forces combing through the plant, and that
five hostage-takers had been captured alive.
Thirty-two kidnappers were also killed in the standoff, and
the army freed 685 Algerian workers and 107 foreigners, the interior ministry
said.
"I fear that it [the death toll] may be revised
upward," Algerian Communications Minister Mohamed Said told a radio
station, ahead of a news conference at 13:30 GMT on Monday by Prime Minister
Abdelmalek Sellal.
French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian described the
hostage-taking as an "act of war" because of the large number of
hostages involved - the biggest since the 2008 attack by Islamist extremists on
the Indian city of Mumbai.
The one-eyed mastermind of the hostage-taking, Mokhtar
Belmokhtar, said in a video posted online that it was carried out by 40
fighters from the Muslim world and "European countries".
His al-Qaeda-linked group "Signatories in Blood"
threatened to stage attacks on nations involved in the French-led operation to
evict Islamists from Algeria's neighbour Mali, and said it had been open to
negotiations.
"But the Algerian army did not respond... preferring to
stage an attack which led to the elimination of the hostages," it said in
a message published by the Mauritanian news agency ANI.
Most hostages were freed on Thursday in the first Algerian
rescue operation, which was initially viewed by foreign governments as hasty,
before the focus of public condemnation turned on the jihadists.
Security cameras
"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," President Barack Obama said, with one American
confirmed dead.
Prime Minister David Cameron said six Britons and one
British resident were thought to have been killed in the hostage crisis, which
he said was a "stark reminder" of the threat of global terrorism.
Among the other hostages killed were at least one Algerian,
one Colombian and two Romanians. Those still unaccounted for include several
Japanese nationals, five Norwegians, two Americans and two Malaysians.
The plant is run by Britain's BP, Norway's Statoil and
Sonatrach of Algeria.
An Algerian employee of BP who identified himself as
Abdelkader said he was at a security post on Wednesday with colleagues when he
saw a jeep with seven people inside smash through the barrier and screech to a
halt.
One of the militants demanded their mobile phones and
ordered them not to move, before disabling the security cameras.
"He said: 'You are Algerians and Muslims, you have
nothing to fear. We're looking for Christians, who kill our brothers in Mali
and Afghanistan and plunder our resources'."
Witnesses agreed that the hostage-takers were well informed
about the In Amenas complex, close to the Libyan border, and suspected inside
help.