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Algeria’s hostage crisis ends in massacre

IN AMENAS, Algeria (AFP) – A dramatic four-day hostage crisis at an Algerian gas plant ended in a bloodbath Saturday when Islamists executed all seven of their remaining foreign captives as troops stormed the desert complex.

Twenty-one hostages, including an unknown number of foreigners, died during the siege that began when the Al-Qaeda-linked gunmen attacked the facility deep in the Sahara at dawn on Wednesday, the interior ministry said.

Thirty-two kidnappers were also killed, and special forces were able to free “685 Algerian workers and 107 foreigners,” the ministry said.

The kidnappers led by Algerian Mokhtar Belmokhtar, a former Al-Qaeda commander in North Africa, killed two people on a bus, a Briton and an Algerian, before taking hundreds of workers hostage when they overran the In Amenas complex.

Belmokhtar’s “Signatories in Blood” group had been demanding an end to French military intervention against jihadists in neighbouring Mali.

In Saturday’s assault, “the Algerian army took out 11 terrorists, and the terrorist group killed seven foreign hostages,” state television said, without giving a breakdown of their nationalities.

A security official who spoke to AFP as army helicopters overflew the plant gave the same death tolls, adding it was believed the foreigners were executed “in retaliation”.

As experts began to clear the complex of bombs planted by the Islamists, residents of In Amenas breathed a collective sigh of relief.

“We went from a peaceful situation to a terror situation,” said one resident who gave his name as Fouad.

“The plant could have exploded and taken out the town,” said another.

Brahim Zaghdaoui said he was not surprised by the Algerian army’s ruthless final assault.

“It was predictable that it would end like that,” he said.

Most of the hostages had been freed on Thursday when Algerian forces launched a rescue operation, which was widely condemned as hasty.

But French President Francois Hollande and US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta refused to lay the blame on Algeria.

The Algiers government’s response was “the most appropriate” given it was dealing with “coldly determined terrorists ready to kill their hostages,” said Hollande.

Panetta added: “They are in the region, they understand the threat from terrorism… I think it’s important that we continue to work with (Algiers) to develop a regional approach.”

British Defence Secretary Philip Hammond said the crisis had been “brought to an end by a further assault by Algerian forces, which has resulted in further loss of life”.

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