
Reuters TV
A wounded man is cared for in a hospital in Tigantourine, Algeria, on Jan. 18, 2013 after being freed from Islamist militant captors at a gas field in Algeria.
The militants had filled five jeeps with hostages and begun to move when Algerian government attack helicopters opened up on them, leaving four in smoking ruins. The fifth vehicle crashed, allowing an Irish hostage inside to clamber out to safety with an explosive belt still strapped around his neck.
Three days into the crisis at a natural gas plant deep in the Sahara, it remained unclear how many had perished in the faceoff between Africa's most uncompromising militant group and the region's most ruthless military.
By Friday, around 100 of the 135 foreign workers on the site had been freed and 18 of an estimated 30 kidnappers had been slain, according to the Algerian government, still leaving a major hostage situation centered on the plant's main refinery.
The government said 12 workers, both foreign and Algerian, were confirmed dead. But the extremists have put the number at 35. And the government attack Thursday on the convoy — as pieced together from official, witness and news media accounts —suggested the death toll could go higher. The U.S. government confirmed that one of the dead was a Texan, Frederick Buttaccio.
Meanwhile, the al-Qaida-linked Masked Brigade behind the operation offered to trade two American hostages for two terrorists behind bars in the U.S., including the mastermind of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing — a deal the U.S. rejected out of hand.
The remote In Amenas plant, jointly run by BP, Norway's Statoil and Algeria's state-owned oil company, is deep in the featureless desert. The Algerian government has released few details about the continuing siege.
By Friday, however, the outlines of the takeover by Islamic militants were coming into focus. The attack had been in the works for two months, a member of the Masked Brigade told an online Mauritanian news outlet that often carries al-Qaida-related announcements. The band of attackers included militants from Algeria, Mali, Egypt, Niger, Mauritania and Canada, he said.
He said militants targeted Algeria because they expected the country to support the international effort to root out extremists in neighboring Mali.
Instead of passing through Algeria's relatively well-patrolled deserts, the attackers came in from southern Libya, where there is little central government and smugglers have long reigned supreme, according to Algeria's Interior Minister Daho Ould Kabila.
He said the attackers consisted of about 30 men armed with rocket launchers and machine guns and under the direct supervision of the Masked Brigade's founder himself, Moktar Belmoktar, a hardened, one-eyed Algerian militant who has battled the Algerian government for years and went on to build a Saharan smuggling and kidnapping empire linked to al-Qaida.
Early Wednesday morning, they crept across the border, 60 miles from the natural gas plant, and fell on a pair of buses taking foreign workers to the airport. The buses' military escort drove off the attackers in a blaze of gunfire that sent bullets zinging over the heads of the crouching workers. A Briton and an Algerian, probably a security guard, were killed.
Frustrated, the militants turned to the vast gas complex, divided between the workers' living quarters and the refinery itself, and seized hostages, the Algerian government said.
The takeover soon turned into a standoff as military units from a nearby base surrounded the complex.

Algerian TV via Reuters TV
A British man is interviewed by Algerian TV about the In Amenas hostage taking. "I think they did a fantastic job. I was very impressed with the Algerian army,
Algerians interviewed by French radio described militants knocking down doors in the living quarters, saying they were looking for foreigners. The foreign workers, including Americans, Britons, French, Norwegians, Romanians, Malaysians and Japanese, were separated from the Algerians and kept under close guard, wrapped with explosive belts. The Algerians for the most part were allowed to wander freely around the complex, and some were released, according to the state news agency.
Alexandre Berceaux, a Frenchman who was later rescued by Algerian soldiers, described two harrowing days of confusion hiding in his room as Algerian colleagues supplied him with food.
"I stayed hidden in my room for almost 40 hours," he told Europe 1 radio, saying he hid under the bed and didn't even realize when his ordeal was over.
The militants declared that the takeover was prompted by France's attacks on al-Qaida-linked rebels in Mali, and they demanded that the intervention end or the hostages would pay for it.
That night, Kabila, Algeria's top security official, announced that in accordance to Algeria's longstanding policy, "we reject all negotiations with the group." Despite regular elections, Algeria is run by a coterie of generals and ruling party leaders who got the country through a bloody, decade-long Islamist rebellion with brutal tactics that earned them the nickname "the eradicators."
On Thursday afternoon, Algerian military forces saw a five- jeep convoy moving from one part of the complex to another. Fearing the kidnappers were trying to make a break for it, they sent attack helicopters into action.
Irish electrician Stephen McFaul was in that convoy and made it out alive as the world exploded around him.
"Four of the jeeps were taken out and everybody in them was killed," McFaul's brother, Brian, told the Irish Times. "The jeep my brother was in crashed and my brother made break for it," with a belt of explosives strapped around his neck.
The kidnappers called the Mauritanian news service ANI to say that 35 hostages and 15 of their fighters had been killed in the bloodbath — a figure that was impossible to confirm. The kidnappers told ANI that they were just trying to consolidate hostages into a single location when the Algerians attacked.
By Thursday night, the state news agency announced that the assault was over and that special forces had secured the plant, but the next day it would emerge that they had taken only the living quarters. The hostages and their kidnappers remained ensconced in the refinery.
An international outcry mounted over the Algerians' handling of the crisis. Experts noted that this is how they have always dealt with terrorists.
"It's the Russian training for dealing with terrorism," said Matieu Guidere, a longtime expert on al-Qaida and Algeria. "The message is: We will terrorize the terrorists. ... This is clear. The life of hostages is nothing in the balance."
The Algerian government insisted it had to intervene to prevent a catastrophe.
Related:
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Details emerge in militant takeover, rescue operation at Algeria gas field
Violence in Mali, Algeria raises fresh fear of radical Islam
US military cargo planes to help French in Mali
Algerian militant dubbed 'Mr Marlboro' raked in millions from kidnappings


Good job! The Algerian Army has my approval!
Hmmmmm, I certainly hope our northern border is zipped up tighter than our southern border.
You can always depend on a right wing lunatic to assume that because one individual does something, all others must be the same.
The Algerians did the right thing - if they had not struck that would only be the green light for more Islamic groups to seize more production facilities. They may not have had the skills or equipment of the SAS or the SEALS, but good on them for signalling exactly what they will do in the event of future terrorist acts - kill them. The hostages were most likely going to die anyway - better to be caught in crossfire than have your head lopped off on a YouTube video for all the world to see.
I agree.....good work.....
Congratulations to the Algerians for taking swift action and doing what they thought was right. If they had consulted any other country, they would have had as many suggestions as there are countries, perhaps more. The message is clear: You engage in terrorism in Algeria and there will be no reward. Good work & God bless!
The life of hostages is nothing in the balance."
And if these had been your relative would you still agree with the algerians ??
THIS WAS WRONG !!! They should not have attacked so soon and they should have consulted with foreign governments ! the arabs do not care about western life and we saw it with this tragedy.
Actually, if I had been a hostage, I would prefer a fight to the death. Everyone who works in Africa or the middle east should agree to those same terms.
Agree, assault vest, grenades, choice of handgun and carbine as long as every one agrees so I can strip ammo or weapons off the dead.
They should have all been armed to the teeth. I understand that the people who work there know they are in danger, and that they accept the risks that come with the jobs, but they should get some military training and weapons, so they are not like sitting ducks.
8:47 a.m. US EST- Algerian g'ment aviso to all news agencies- ALL DEAD- 7 foreign hostages and 11 kidnappers. The operations are over.
Confirmed- 7 foreign hostages and ii terrorists killed- for further info go to http://vg.no/nyheter/un tenriks/artikkel.php?artid=10074327 or http://www.elwatan.com/actualite/urgent-site-gazier-de-in-amenas-7-otages-executes-por-leuers-janisseurs-el-les-11-terroristes-elimines-par-1-anp-19-01-2013/ or go to http://www.lexpress.fr/actualite/monde/afrique/en-direct-algeries-les-derneres-infos-sur-la-prise-d-otages_1211413.html
The 7 hostages left have been killed ! 2 americans among them
on french news, now
I'm very sorry for the families of those who were killed and I grieve with them... but the Algerian government handled this properly. No hesitation, no negotiating when dealing with terrorists. Just like any soldier going into a war zone, any foreigners who go to work in a Muslim country must accept the risk. And yes, if it had been my relative I would still feel the same.
Stop calling these scumbags 'jihadists' and 'militants'. They are terrorists, pure and simple. Terrorists deserve death. They are the first to dish it out, but the first to run away when help comes. Terrorists do not follow a religion. They use a religion to justify murder, kidnapping, rape and extortion. Call them terrorists and just kill them all. No prisoners.
It appears at first glance the Algerian military conducted the operation as well as it could have given the circumstances. The Algerians don't have the money, facilities and expertise that larger countries like Britain, France or the US have. And believe me when I say, not every operation run by the US, Britain and France come off smoothly. I can run down a list of operational disasters committed by any major military power you care to mention, so lighten up a little on the Algerians.
The Alergians also have a different mind set when it comes to dealing with terrorists, so when they launch an operation they have a different orientation than the US. They approach it from "Mission First" concept as opposed to a law enforcement attitude.
Interestingly, Morsi has already tried to negotiate the release of the the "blind sheik" That puts Morsi and the Al Qaida franchises in the same mosque. Kinda tells you where Egypt is heading.
Now if they can get the captured terroists to talk about the location of their training base and pass that along to the other nations with drones, we can help out in some additional retribution.
what the Islamic terrorists are dead?....sniff....sniff.......NEXT
I would only work in the Middle East if I were allowed to be armed.
This is a dangerous part of the world, and Westerners should know by now that they are targets.
Better to die fighting than be killed in any disgusting way the terrorists choose. Muslims, Eastern Europeans and Asians MAY have a shot at being released at some point, but forget that option if you are an American or Britain or French. Terrorists get extra brownie points by killing Westerners. So, Fight back, or better yet, abandon those @!$%# hole countries entirely until a responsible government takes over. We have enough petroleum reserves in North America to make the Middle East irrelevant. If Japan and China and others want and need oil from there then let them step up and protect the workers.