The In Amenas gas facility about 100km from the Algerian
and Libyan border, the site of a hostage drama in the wake
of an attack on the gas field by Islamist militants.
REUTERS/Kjetil Alsvik / Statoil/Handout
Islamist militants have attacked a gas field in Algeria,
and claim to have kidnapped up to 41 foreigners including seven
Americans in a dawn raid in retaliation for France's
intervention in Mali, according to regional media reports.
The raiders were also reported to have killed three people,
including a Briton and a French national.
An al Qaeda affiliated group said the raid had been carried
out because of Algeria's decision to allow France to use its
air space for attacks against Islamists in Mali, where French
forces have been in action against al Qaeda-linked militants
since last week.
The attack in southern Algeria also raised fears that the
French action in Mali could prompt further Islamist revenge
attacks on Western targets in Africa, where al Qaeda in the
Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) operates across borders in the Sahara
desert, and in Europe.
AQIM said it had carried out Wednesday's raid on the In
Amenas gas facility in OPEC member Algeria, Mauritania's ANI
news agency reported.
The Algerian interior ministry said: "A terrorist group,
heavily armed and using three vehicles, launched an attack
this Wednesday at 5 a.m. against a Sonatrach base in
Tigantourine, near In Amenas, about 100 km (60 miles) from
the Algerian and Libyan border."
"The Algerian authorities will not respond to the demands of
the terrorists and will not negotiate," Interior Minister
Daho Ould Kablia was quoted as saying by official news agency
APS.
The gas field is operated by a joint venture including BP ,
Norwegian oil firm Statoil and Algerian state company
Sonatrach.
ARMED MEN
BP said armed men were still occupying facilities at the gas
field, which produces 9 billion cubic metres of gas a
year(160,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day), more than a
tenth of the country's overall gas output, and 60,000 barrels
a day of condensate.
"The site was attacked and occupied by a group of
unidentified armed people at about 0500 UK time. Contact with
the site is extremely difficult, but we understand that armed
individuals are still occupying the In Amenas operations
site," it said.
APS said a Briton and an Algerian security guard had been
killed and seven people were injured. A French national was
also killed in the attack, a local source said.
Also among those reported kidnapped by various sources were
five Japanese nationals working for the Japanese engineering
firm JGC Corp, a French national, an Irishman, and a number
of Britons.
The U.S. State Department said it believed some U.S. citizens
were also among the hostages, while Norway said 13 of its
nationals were involved.
A member of an Islamist group styling itself the "Blood
Battalion" was quoted by Mauritanian media as saying that
five of the hostages were being held at the gas facility and
36 were in a housing area. APS said the Islamist raiders had
freed Algerians working at the gas facility.
"The operation was in response to the blatant interference by
Algeria and the opening of its air space to French aircraft
to bomb northern Mali," the Islamist spokesman told
Mauritania's ANI news agency.
ANI, which has regular direct contact with Islamists, said
that fighters under the command of Mokhtar Belmokhtar were
holding the foreigners.
Belmokhtar for years commanded al Qaeda fighters in the
Sahara before setting up his own armed Islamist group late
last year after an apparent fallout with other militant
leaders.
The Algerian army was in the area of the gas facility,
according to French and Algerian sources.
ANI also reported that the Islamists said they were
surrounded by Algerian forces and warned that any attempt to
free the hostages would lead to a "tragic end". One of the
hostage takers told ANI that the perimeter of the site had
been mined.
SECURITY IMPLICATIONS
The attack was the first time in years that Islamist
militants are known to have launched an attack on an Algerian
energy facility.
The attack could have implications for security across the
whole of Algeria's energy sector, which supplies about a
quarter of Europe's natural gas imports and exports millions
of barrels of crude oil each year.
Such an attack would require a large and heavily armed
insurgent force with a degree of freedom to move around, all
elements that al Qaeda has not previously had.
However, the conflict in neighbouring Libya in 2011 changed
the balance of force. Security experts say al Qaeda was able
to obtain arms, including heavy weapons, from the looted
arsenals of former leader Muammar Gaddafi.
Statoil, a minority shareholder in the gas venture, said it
had 17 employees at the plant and four of them had been
evacuated. The company declined to comment on the other 13.
The five Japanese work for the engineering firm JGC
Corporation, Jiji news agency reported, quoting company
officials. JGC has a deal with Sonatrach-BP-Statoil
Association for work in gas production at In Amenas.
A reporter for Japan's NHK television managed to call a JGC
worker in Algeria.
The worker said he got a phone call from a colleague at the
gas field. "It was around 6 a.m. this morning. He said that
he had been hearing gunshots for about 20 minutes. I wasn't
able to get through to him since."
French troops launched their first ground operation against
Islamist rebels in Mali on Wednesday in an action to dislodge
from a strategic town al Qaeda-linked fighters who have
resisted six days of air strikes.
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