ALGIERS, Jan 16: Armed Islamists said on Wednesday they were holding 41 hostages at an Algerian gas field after killing two foreigners in an attack carried out to avenge Algerian support for French military intervention in Mali.

“Forty-one westerners, including seven Americans, (as well as) French, British and Japanese citizens have been taken hostage,” the Islamists told the Mauritanian News Agency as well as Sahara Media.

Algeria’s APS news agency gave a toll of two people killed, including a Briton, and six injured in the dawn attack by suspected Al Qaeda loyalists in Tigantourine, southern Algeria.

It did not identify the nationality of the other person killed.

Britain’s Foreign Office was unable confirm that a Briton died in the attack, which took place near the In Amenas gas field, close to the Libyan border, saying only that “British nationals are caught up in this incident”.

The gas field is jointly operated by British oil giant BP, Norway’s Statoil and state-run Algerian energy firm Sonatrach.

Production was shut down after the attack.

“We can confirm that there is an ongoing security incident at the In Amenas gas field,” BP said on Wednesday.

“The site was attacked and occupied by a group of unidentified armed people at daybreak. Contact with the site is extremely difficult, but we understand that armed individuals are still occupying the In Amenas operations site.”

Earlier, Algeria’s interior ministry said the attackers, after being repelled by security units escorting the bus to In Amenas airport, headed to the oil workers’ base, taking an unknown number of workers hostage.

Japanese engineering firm JGC said five Japanese workers were believed to have been seized in the raid, while separate sources said a Frenchman, an Irish citizen and a Norwegian were among those taken hostage.

One of the attackers said by telephone that they were Al Qaeda loyalists who had slipped into Algeria from northern Mali, where France launched a major offensive on Jan 11 to prevent militants from advancing on the capital Bamako. “We are members of Al Qaeda and we came from northern Mali,” the militant said. “We belong to the Khaled Abul Abbas Brigade (better known as Mokhtar Belmokhtar),” he added.

The kidnapping was claimed by a group recently formed by Mokhtar Belmokhtar, a one-eyed jihadist nicknamed “The Uncatchable”, who has been sentenced to life imprisonment in absentia on several occasions in his home country, Algeria.

According to the Islamist spokesman who did not give his name to the two Mauritanian media outlets, the attack was “a reaction to Algeria’s flagrant interference in allowing French planes into its airspace to launch raids on northern Mali”.

He called Algeria’s attitude “a betrayal for the blood of Algerian martyrs slain by the French colonists”. He said five of the hostages were being held at the gas plant, while the others were in a housing complex on the site.—AFP

Opinion

Editorial

Price bombs
17 Jun, 2024

Price bombs

THERE was a time not too long ago when the faces we see sitting in government today would cry themselves hoarse over...
Palestine’s plight
17 Jun, 2024

Palestine’s plight

AS pilgrims wrap up the Haj rituals, and other Muslims celebrate Eidul Azha, the continuing massacre in Gaza demands...
Profiting off denied visas
17 Jun, 2024

Profiting off denied visas

IT is no secret that visa applications to the UK and Schengen countries come at a high cost. But recent published...
After the deluge
Updated 16 Jun, 2024

After the deluge

There was a lack of mental fortitude in the loss against India while against US, the team lost all control and displayed a lack of cohesion and synergy.
Fugue state
16 Jun, 2024

Fugue state

WITH its founder in jail these days, it seems nearly impossible to figure out what the PTI actually wants. On one...
Sindh budget
16 Jun, 2024

Sindh budget

SINDH’S Rs3.06tr budget for the upcoming financial year is a combination of populist interventions, attempts to...