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  • 19
    Apr
    2013
    9:38am, EDT

    'Immense relief': French family kidnapped by Islamists in Cameroon freed after 4 months

    Reinnier Kaze / AFP - Getty Images

    (From left) Former French hostages Tanguy Moulin-Fournier, his wife Albane and his brother Cyril pose at the French embassy in Yaounde on Friday. The family of seven were kidnapped in Cameroon in February by an Islamist movement from neighboring Nigeria.

    By Tansa Musa and Bate Felix, Reuters

    YAOUNDE, Cameroon -- A French family of seven, including four children, have been released in Cameroon following secret talks, France said on Friday, ending two months of captivity in the hands of Nigerian Islamist militants.

    Armed men on motorcycles snatched the family on February 19 while they were on holiday near the Waza national park in north Cameroon, some 6 miles from the Nigerian border.

    "I spoke to the father this morning ... He told me how happy and relieved he was," French President Francois Hollande told a news conference in Paris on Friday. "This is an immense relief. This will redouble our determination to free the hostages who remain."

    Eight French hostages remain held by al Qaeda-linked Islamist militant groups in the Sahel region.

    Hollande said there had been contacts over the last few weeks to discreetly free the family under French terms and denied any ransom was paid.

    "France has not changed its position, which is not to pay ransoms," he said.

    The father of the kidnapped family, Tanguy Moulin-Fournier, worked in Cameroon for French utility firm GDF Suez. He was kidnapped with his wife, two daughters and two sons, and his brother, who was visiting them on holiday.

    "We are very happy to be released. I want to thank (Cameroon) President Paul Biya for making all the effort to ensure our release," his tired-looking wife, Albane Moulin-Fournier, said on Cameroon television, holding her smallest child.

    Both adult males of the family had thick beards while the children looked drawn, and wore flip-flops, knee-length trousers and tee-shirts.

    Ferdinand Ngoh Ngoh, secretary-general of Cameroon's presidency, said all family members were well.

    State television showed the family descending from a plane where they were greeted on the tarmac by the French ambassador who took them to the embassy in the capital Yaounde.

    French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius was due to meet them there, a French official said, and they would be repatriated to France as soon as possible.

    The release of the hostages is a rare piece of good news for Hollande's government, which is struggling to cut unemployment and has been hit by a tax fraud scandal which has forced its budget minister to resign.

    Mostly Muslim northern Cameroon is considered an area within the operational sphere of Islamist militants including Boko Haram, Nigeria's biggest security threat.

    Gunmen claiming to be from Boko Haram released videos of the family in March, threatening to kill them unless Nigeria and Cameroon released Muslim militants held in detention.

    Cameroon denied it was holding any militants and it was unclear if any of the group's demands had been met.

    Additional reporting by John Irish and Brian Love in Paris.

    Related:

    Nigeria in 'massive manhunt' for French hostages

    French special forces join search for family of 7 kidnapped in Africa

    French family with 4 children kidnapped by Islamists in Africa

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    75 comments

    Glad to see the family was released unharmed. A word to the parents though. Next time you take a family vacation, try Disneyland or Sea World! Heck of a lot safer than taking your wife and family to an Islamist militant infested pest hole in Africa.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: france, nigeria, cameroon, africa, release, hostage, al-qaeda, featured, islamists, boko-haram
  • 23
    Jan
    2013
    11:17am, EST

    Hints of a bloodbath: Hostage secretly took photos during Algeria siege

    Kyodo via AP

    An Islamic militant (in camouflage uniform, rear right) stands near Algerian employees who were forced to leave their living quarters with their belongings at the In Amenas natural gas complex in Algeria on Jan. 16.

    By Erin McClam, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The images are striking for what they don’t show. They hold only hints of the bloodshed to come.

    The Japanese news agency Kyodo has released the first photographs from inside a hostage crisis in the North African nation of Algeria, secretly snapped by one of the captives with a cellphone camera.

    Islamist fighters stormed a gas field and nearby barracks on Jan. 16 and took hundreds of people hostage. The Algerian army launched a rescue raid the following day, opening a three-day standoff.

    It ended in a bloody clash. The Algerian government put the death toll at 67, including 38 foreign workers and 29 militants. The U.S. State Department said that three Americans were among those killed.

    The photos released by Kyodo depict the opening hours of the crisis. They show a scene that -- while certainly not safe -- appeared stable.

    In one shot, an Islamic militant, armed and wearing a mask and camouflage uniform, stands several feet away from three Algerian workers who had been forced to leave their living quarters. One of the three is wearing a hoodie, and another has his hands stuffed in his pockets.

    Kyodo via Reuters

    An Islamic militant (rear center, in camouflage) stands among Algerian employees who were forced to leave their living quarters with their belongings at the In Amenas natural gas complex on Jan. 16.

    In a second photo, Algerian workers stand around among duffel bags and plastic water bottles arranged on the ground outside. A militant appears in the background, facing away, easy to miss but for the butt of his rifle.

    A third picture is far more ominous: In the foreground are several militants, in the background at least a dozen hostages, forced to sit against a wall of the complex.

    Kyodo via AP

    Islamic militants stand in front of foreign hostages, seen sitting against a wall, at the Ain Amenas natural gas complex on Jan. 16.

    Kyodo did not say how it had obtained the photos. A Japanese government source said on Monday that the Algerian government listed nine Japanese killed in the siege, the highest toll among non-Algerians working at the site.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    5 comments

    Stop calling them jihadists or insurgents! They are simply terrorists!

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    Explore related topics: gas, africa, militants, hostage, algeria, islamist, photographs
  • 20
    Jan
    2013
    8:42am, EST

    Sahara hostage death toll will rise, Algeria warns

    After the death of Western workers in an attack on a gas plant in the Sahara, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta vows to hunt down the militants responsible. NBC News' Annabel Roberts reports.

    By Alastair Jamieson, NBC News

    The death toll in the bloody Algeria hostage siege is likely to rise, Algeria warned on Sunday as governments struggled to confirm reports 23 Western workers – including some Americans - had been killed.

    A day after the desert crisis was ended by Algerian troops, 25 bodies were discovered inside the gas pumping facility that was stormed by Islamist militants on Wednesday, according to reports cited by Reuters and the Associated Press.

    Confusion still surrounds the deadly incident, which has renewed global fears about the likelihood of terror attacks and the safety of Westerners around the world.


    It has also left other governments, including Britain, with a frustrating wait for further information out of the west African country.

    Algeria’s government said Saturday that 23 hostages and 32 militants were killed during ‘rescue’ assaults launched by its own forces, with 107 foreign hostages and 685 Algerian hostages freed.

    However, Minister of Communication Mohamed Said this would rise when final numbers were issued in the coming hours, Reuters reported.

    "I am afraid unfortunately to say that the death toll will go up," Said was quoted as saying by the official APS news agency.

    The U.S. government confirmed Friday that one of the dead hostages was Frederick Buttaccio from Texas.

    The exact number of other Americans involved, and their fate, remains unclear.

    President Barack Obama said on Saturday the United States was seeking from Algerian authorities a fuller understanding of what took place, but said "the blame for this tragedy rests with the terrorists who carried it out."

    Britain on Sunday confirmed that three of its citizens and one British resident had been killed in the Algerian military operation.

    Prime Minister David Cameron echoed Obama’s sentiments, saying responsibility for the deaths “lies squarely with the terrorists who launched the attack,” regardless of questions about the Algerian government's response.

    The hostage-taking illustrated the global threat of terrorism which “requires a global response,” Cameron said Sunday.

    One Briton had already was confirmed killed when the gunmen seized the hostages before dawn on Wednesday at the plant, run by Norway's Statoil along with Britain's BP and Algeria's state oil company.

    The AP reported that "numerous" bodies were found at the pumping facility by Algerian de-mining squads searching for explosives, according to an Algerian government spokesman.

    Statoil said five of its workers, all Norwegian nationals, were still missing. Japanese workers are also unaccounted for, Reuters said.

    Related content:

    1 American killed, 2 escape in Algeria hostage crisis, US officials say; militants seek to trade 2 others for blind sheik

    Details emerge in militant takeover, rescue operation at Algeria gas field

     

    82 comments

    All the hostages and many others are now deceased: http://drudgereport.com/ My condolences to the hostages families and friends.

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    Explore related topics: middle-east, world, terror, africa, hostage, algeria, al-qaeda, featured, mali
  • 18
    Jan
    2013
    8:54pm, EST

    Details emerge in militant takeover, rescue operation at Algeria gas field

    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.

    By Aomar Ouali and Paul Schemm, The Associated Press

    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.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    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.

    One American killed, 2 escape in hostage crisis, U.S. officials say; two others reportedly still held

    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:

    Expert: Islamists' Algeria raid could inspire copycat attacks
    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

     

     

    20 comments

    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  …

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    Explore related topics: security, terrorism, al-qaida, militant, hostage, algeria, gas-plan, masked-brigade
  • 17
    Jan
    2013
    10:57pm, EST

    Some survive Algeria gas plant hostage crisis, but fate of dozens unknown

    US officials are saying very little about the Algerian military operation to free those taken hostage after militants attacked a gas facility Wednesday morning. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    By Kari Huus, Staff writer, NBC News

    The fate of dozens of hostages seized by Islamists at a gas field in Algeria remained unclear early Friday, hours after the Algerian military stormed the site.

    At least six people, and perhaps many more, were killed, The Associated Press reported, and dozens were unaccounted for.

    Algerian state media reported Thursday evening that the military operation had ended at the remote desert facility where dozens of workers — including three Americans — had been held hostage. The Algerian government was reported as saying two Filipinos and two British hostages had been killed.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Accounts of the number of hostages and militants killed in the operation differed wildly — ranging from four to 35 — in reports from regional sources cited by The Associated Press and Reuters.

    Among those unaccounted for were Americans, Britons, French, Norwegians, Romanians, Malaysians, Japanese and Algerians.

    Some of the hostages reportedly escaped from the natural gas pumping plant, near In Amenas, close to the border with Libya and 800 miles from the Algerian capital.

    An unknown number of hostages left the country on a charter flight and were expected to land at London's Gatwick airport near midnight Thursday, according to BP, which operates the gas complex. The plane had not arrived as of 3:15 a.m. Friday.

    The Islamist militants stormed the plant and workers' housing before dawn on Wednesday seizing up to 41 hostages in one of the biggest international hostage incidents in decades.

    The militants have demanded an end to the French military campaign in Mali where ground troops and air forces of the former colonial power are backing Mali's military in offensive against Islamist rebels linked to al-Qaida in that country.

    The group that has claimed responsibility for the gas plant raid is said to be led by an Islamic militant called Mokhtar bel Mokhtar, whose nicknames include "The Uncatchable" and "Mr. Marlboro."

    According to the AP, militants with the Masked Brigade, a Mali-based al-Qaida offshoot, provided updates through a Mauritanian news organization that said the Algerians attacked when the militants tried to move hostages from the energy complex. The group claimed that 35 hostages and 15 militants died but seven hostages survived the helicopter attack on its convoy.

    An Algerian security official says the decision to send forces came because the militants were being stubborn and wanted to flee with the hostages.

    U.S. officials called the hostage situation "murky" and said the United States is working with the Algerian government and other affected nations to try to resolve the situation as quickly and securely as possible.

    "It's in a remote area of Algeria, near the Libyan border," Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said. "The security of our Americans who are held hostage is our highest priority, but of course we care deeply about the other Algerian and foreign hostages as well."

    Clinton said she could not provide any additional information about the situation. 

    An Ireland government spokesman said Thursday that an Irish national held at the In Amenas gas plant had "made contact with his family and is understood to be safe and well, and no longer a hostage."

    Sky News in London identified the Irish survivor as Stephen McFaul, 46, from west Belfast.

    In an interview with the television station, McFaul's father Christopher said he was "delighted" by the news but added he felt "sorry for the other hostages that are still there."

    He also described the last 48 hours as "hell".

    Stephen McFaul's son, Dylan, also spoke to the Sky reporters: "I can't even explain the excitement. I can't wait until he gets home again," he said, adding that he would tell his father "he's never going back there and I'm not letting him".

    A local resident near the plant told Reuters the Algerian military had opened fire and that "many people" were killed.

    Twenty hostages of an Algerian militant group with ties to al Qaeda in a standoff with the Algerian Army are reported to have escaped Thursday. Over 41 hostages of several nationalities, including Americans, were being held in a BP gas facility. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.

    Faycal Metaqui, a journalist at Algerian newspaper El Watan, told French news channel BFM that he was unable to confirm with authorities the earlier reports that some hostages had escaped.

    "Sadly, there have been some reports of casualties, but we are still lacking any confirmed or reliable information," said a statement from oil giant BP, which is a joint owner of the plant.

    Related content:

    In Mali, land of 'gangster-jihadists,' ransoms help fuel the movement
    France launches 'tough' ground offensive against Mali's Islamist rebels

    Nancy Ing, Jim Miklaszewski and Courtney Kube of NBC News, contributed to this report.

    447 comments

    Can only hope for the best here. At this time, there isn't a whole ton of information. But any causualties aren't the fault of the Algerian military. They are the fault of the hostage takers.

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    Explore related topics: oil, france, world, terrorism, al-qaida, gas, africa, hostage, algeria, mali, kari-huus
  • 17
    Jan
    2013
    6:26am, EST

    Some hostages reported to have escaped Islamist captors in Algeria

    Militants who attacked a natural gas facility in eastern Algeria took as many as 40 people hostage, including three Americans as retaliation for France's intervention in neighboring Mali. NBC's Rohit Kachroo reports.

    By Lamine Chikhi and Bate Felix, Reuters

    ALGIERS, Algeria -- Fifteen hostages were reported Thursday to have escaped from Islamist fighters who claimed to be holding 41 foreign nationals after taking over a gas plant in the Algerian desert.

    U.S. officials said Wednesday that three Americans were among the hostages, but the report of the escape by Algerian television did not make clear whether they were among those who managed to flee.

    Mauritania's ANI news agency reported that one of the kidnappers had claimed two Algerian army helicopters attacked the gas complex, injuring two of the Japanese hostages. It was not possible to independently verify the report, Reuters said. ANI has close contacts with the al-Qaida-linked group that has claimed responsibility for the mass kidnapping.

    Nearly 24 hours after gunmen stormed the natural gas pumping site and workers' housing before dawn on Wednesday, little was certain beyond a claim by a group calling itself the "Battalion of Blood" that it was holding foreign nationals, including Japanese and Europeans in addition to the Americans, at Tigantourine, near In Amenas, deep in the Sahara.

    The raid opened an international front in the civil war in neighboring Mali, just as French troops launched an offensive against Islamist rebels in that country.

    Kjetil Alsvik / Statoil via AFP - Getty Images, file

    This picture released by Norway's Statoil on shows vehicles parked at the In Amenas gas field in eastern Algeria near the Libyan border. Algerian troops surrounded Islamists holding foreign hostages at the field on Thursday.

    On Wednesday, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said he wanted "to assure the American people that the United States will take all necessary and proper steps that are required to deal with this situation."

    British Foreign Secretary William Hague confirmed one Briton had been killed and "a number" of others were being held hostage. Algerian media said an Algerian was killed in the assault. Another local report said a Frenchman had died.

    "This is a dangerous and rapidly developing situation," Hague told reporters in Sydney on Thursday, adding Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron had spoken with the Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika.

    The crisis presents French President Francois Hollande with a daunting dilemma and spreads fallout from Mali's war against loosely allied bands of al-Qaida-inspired rebels far beyond Africa, challenging Washington and Europe.

    Led by an Algerian veteran of guerrilla wars in Afghanistan, the group demanded France halt its week-old intervention in Mali, an operation endorsed by Western and African allies who fear that al-Qaida is building a haven in the desert.

    Hollande has warned of a long, hard struggle in Mali and now faces a risk of attacks on more French and other Western targets in Africa and beyond.

    The Algerian government ruled out negotiating and the United States and other Western governments condemned what they called a terrorist attack on a facility, now shut down, that produces 10 percent of Algeria's gas, much of which is pumped to Europe.

    A French businessman with employees at the site said the foreigners were bound and under tight guard, while local staff, numbering 150 or more, were held apart and had more freedom.

    The militants, communicating through established contacts with media in neighboring Mauritania, said they had dozens of men at the base, near the town of In Amenas close to the Libyan border, and that they were armed with mortars and anti-aircraft missiles.

    The group said its fighters had rigged explosives around the site and any attempt to free the hostages would lead to a "tragic end."
    Algerian Interior Minister Daho Ould Kablia said the raid was led by Mokhtar Belmokhtar, who fought Soviet forces in Afghanistan in the 1980s and recently set up his own group in the Sahara after falling out with other local al-Qaida leaders.

    Belmokhtar is a holy warrior and smuggler dubbed "The Uncatchable" by French intelligence and "Mister Marlboro" by some locals for his illicit cigarette-running business.

    In their own statements, the militants condemned Algeria's secularist government for "betraying" its predecessors in the bloody anti-colonial war against French rule half a century ago by letting French warplanes fly over its territory to Mali. They also accused Algeria of shutting its border to Malian refugees.

    Hollande has called for international support against rebels who France says pose a threat to Africa and the West, and admits it faces a long struggle against well-equipped fighters who seized Timbuktu and other oasis towns in northern Mali and have imposed Islamic law, including public amputations and beheading.

    Islamists have warned Hollande that he has "opened the gates of hell" for all French citizens.

    The conflict, in a landlocked state of 15 million twice the size of France, has displaced an estimated 30,000 people and raised concerns across mostly Muslim West Africa of a radicalization of Islam in the region.

    NBC News' Robert Windrem contributed to this report.

    Related stories:

    French to send 1,000 more troops to Mali; US playing supporting role
    ANALYSIS: Why France is taking on Mali extremists
    Al-Qaida-linked fighters destroy 'end of the world' gate in Timbuktu

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    59 comments

    Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said: "I want to assure the American people that the United States will take all necessary and proper steps that are required to deal with this situation." Just like they did in Benghazi? God help the hostages!

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    Explore related topics: energy, world, terror, al-qaida, africa, hostage, algeria, featured, mali
  • 14
    Jan
    2013
    9:55am, EST

    Obama: US forces helped France in failed Somalia rescue attempt

    Al-Kataib Media / MAXPPP via EPA

    An undated TV grab of footage shot by Al-Kataib Media, made available by MAXPPP on Saturday, shows Denis Allex, a French hostage allegedly held by Somali militants, who was reportedly killed during a failed rescue mission by French soldiers.

    By Roberta Rampton, Reuters

    WASHINGTON -- The United States helped France last week during an attempted rescue of a secret agent captured by insurgents in Somalia, President Barack Obama confirmed on Sunday in a letter to Congress.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The French team was trying to free Denis Allex, held since 2009 by al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab, but insurgents apparently killed their hostage during the raid, along with a commando.


    The French defense ministry said that 17 Somali fighters also died in the fight.

    "United States combat aircraft briefly entered Somali airspace to support the rescue operation, if needed. These aircraft did not employ weapons during the operation," Obama said in his letter to U.S. lawmakers.

    Obama sent the letter to Congress to fulfill his obligations under the War Powers Resolution, which requires him to inform policymakers within 48 hours of committing armed forces to military action without congressional authorization.

    Obama said the operation was warranted to further U.S. national security interests, and said U.S. forces "took no direct part in the assault on the compound where it was believed the French citizen was being held hostage."

    Editing by Philip Barbara, Reuters

    Related stories:

    Officials: French agent held by al-Qaida group in Somalia killed in rescue attempt

    Somali troops take control of al-Shabab stronghold Kismayo

    D-Day for al-Qaida in Somalia? Troops storm beaches at last stronghold

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    27 comments

    Whatever happened to all of that Napalm we had left over from the Vietnam war? I can think of some great places to dispose of it.

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    Explore related topics: france, rescue, somalia, raid, united-states, hostage, featured, secret-agent
  • 12
    Jan
    2013
    6:09am, EST

    Officials: French agent held by al-Qaida group in Somalia killed in rescue attempt

    Al-Kataib Media / MAXPPP via EPA

    This undated TV grab of footage by Al-Kataib Media shows Denis Allex, a French agent held by Somali militants.

    By John Irish and Abdi Sheikh, Reuters

    Updated at 3:40 p.m. ET: PARIS/MOGADISHU - A French intelligence officer held hostage in Somalia since 2009 was killed along with at least one other soldier during a botched rescue attempt by French troops on Friday night, the French Defense Ministry said Saturday.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "Commandos broke into where Allex was being detained last night and immediately faced strong resistance," Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian told reporters.

    Another commando is missing.

    The deaths in Somalia coincided with the killing of a pilot in air strikes in Mali, however, striking a double blow to the start of a campaign that represents President Francois Hollande's biggest foreign policy test since his May election.

    Adding confusion to the fallout of the agent's rescue effort, the Harakat al-Shabab al-Mujahideen insurgent group holding Denis Allex said in a statement that he was still alive and being held at a location far from the base where French military helicopters attacked overnight.

    The insurgent group said that the injured French commando "is now in the custody of the mujahideen."

    "Several French soldiers were killed in the battle and many more were injured before they fled from the scene of battle, leaving behind some military paraphernalia and even one of their comrades on the ground," they said in the statement.

    French Army chief Admiral Edouard Guillaud did not confirm whether this was true: "If he is alive then he could be, but he could also be hiding," he told reporters.

    Both sides described a fierce firefight during the raid on the Horn of Africa country that France said was carried out by France's external intelligence agency for which Allex worked.

    A Somali official in Bula Mareer, about 75 miles south of Mogadishu, said French helicopters attacked overnight.

    "Helicopters attacked al Shabaab at 2.00 a.m. this morning. Two civilians died in the crossfire," said Ahmed Omar Mohamed, deputy chairman for lower Shabelle region.

    An al Shabaab official who asked not to be named said they exchanged fire with French commandos. "Three helicopters dropped French commandos. We exchanged fire," the official said.

    'Inhumane conditions'
    Allex was one of two officers from his intelligence agency kidnapped by al Shabaab in Mogadishu in July 2009. His colleague, Marc Aubriere, escaped a month later but Allex had been held ever since in what Paris called "inhumane conditions."

    The ministry said he was kidnapped while carrying out an aid mission with the Somali government. France has previously said the two men were in the Somali capital to train local forces.

    A video of Allex pleading with Hollande to negotiate his release and save his life appeared on a website in October used by Islamist militant groups around the world. Reuters could not verify its authenticity.

    Hollande said at the time the government was seeking to start talks with any party able to facilitate Allex's release.

    After his abduction, al Shabaab issued a series of demands, which included an end to French support for the Somali government and the withdrawal of African Union peacekeepers, whose 17,600-strong troops are helping battle the rebels.

    Under pressure from the peacekeeping troops and Somali government forces, al Shabaab has lost many of its major urban strongholds in south-central Somalia since it launched a rebellion against the Western-backed government in 2007.

    The rebels, who want to impose their strict interpretation of sharia, or Islamic law, across the Horn of Africa state, withdrew from the capital Mogadishu in August last year and lost their last major bastion of Kismayu six weeks ago.

    Read more coverage of Somalia from NBC News

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    83 comments

    You americans are funny, when the french refuse to fight an illegal war like iraq you bad mouth them, then when an african country ask for their help and they go help you bad mouth them.. Damn if they do, damn if they don't !

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    Explore related topics: france, rescue, somalia, hostage, featured, al-shabab, denis-allex
  • 2
    Oct
    2012
    6:08am, EDT

    State Dept: Missing American journalist Austin Tice believed held by Syria regime

    James Lawler Duggan / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Freelance photographer Austin Tice, seen in this July 2012 picture taken at an undisclosed location, has been missing since Aug. 13.

    By Alastair Jamieson, NBC News

    The U.S. believes missing American journalist Austin Tice is in the hands of the Syrian government, a State Department spokeswoman said, after a YouTube emerged purporting to show him at the hands of his captors.

    Spokeswoman Victoria Nuland told reporters Monday that the State Department was unable to verify the accuracy of the video, which appears to shows Tice with masked men that one expert described as a "caricature of a jihadi group."

    Nuland said that the video “may have been staged” and added, “There’s a lot of reason for the Syrian Government to duck responsibility, but we continue to believe that, to the best of our knowledge, we think he is in Syrian Government custody."


     

    The battle for Aleppo: My 18 days with the Syrian rebels

    Former U.S. Marine Tice, who worked for outlets including The Washington Post and media group McClatchy Newspapers, has been missing in Syria since Aug. 13.

    He posted on Twitter on Aug. 11 saying he had been celebrating his birthday with Syrian rebels.

    Spent the day at an FSA pool party with music by @taylorswift13. They even brought me whiskey. Hands down, best birthday ever.

    — Austin Tice (@Austin_Tice) August 11, 2012

    McClatchy reported on its website Monday that Tice was “alive and in the custody of armed men” and quoted Tice’s parents, Marc and Debra, as saying the video was “reassuring.”

    It quoted a statement from the Houston couple saying:

    “Though it is difficult to see our son in such a setting and situation as that depicted in the video, it is reassuring that he appears to be unharmed. It is evident that the current events in Syria are challenging and difficult for everyone involved. Our wish is that peace and stability can once again return to the people of Syria and that our eldest son, Austin, will soon be safely returned to our family.”

    The video clip, which shows masked men carrying guns, came to light after it was shared on a Facebook page associated with supporters of the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

    Dad hopes Ex-Marine in Syria will turn up safe

    NBC News could not confirm the authenticity of the video. The New York Times reported that several analysts expressed doubts about the authenticity of the video.

    The Washington Post also quoted Joseph Holliday, of the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War, as saying the video did not ring true and that the "captors" appeared to be wearing Afghan-style clothing rather than those normally associated with Islamists in Syria.

    “It’s like a caricature of a jihadi group,” he told the newspaper. “It looks like someone went to the Internet, watched pictures of Afghan mujaheddin, then copied them. My gut instinct is that regime security guys dressed up like a bunch of wahoos and dragged him around and released the video to scare the U.S. and others about the danger of al-Qaida extremists in Syria. It would fit their narrative perfectly.”

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    • Two female tourists freed after Ecuador kidnap ordeal
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    116 comments

    The U.S. believes missing American journalist Austin Tice is in the hands of the Syrian government, a State Department spokeswoman said, after a YouTube emerged purporting to show him at the hands of his captors.

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  • 13
    Sep
    2012
    6:04am, EDT

    US aid worker held hostage by al-Qaida pleads for Israel's help

    SITE via AFP - Getty Images

    This image from video obtained from the SITE Intelligence Group on Wednesday shows U.S. hostage Warren Weinstein. SITE reported in a statement that in the video, released by al-Qaida's media arm, Weinstein appeals to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to intervene on his behalf and to work with al-Qaida to accept their demands for his release.

    By Reuters

    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates -- A U.S. aid worker held by al-Qaida in Pakistan for more than a year has appealed to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to help meet the demands of his captors and secure his release, a group that monitors Islamist websites said Wednesday. 

    Hostage Warren Weinstein said U.S. President Barack Obama had shown no interest in his case and had failed to respond or accept al-Qaida's demands, the SITE monitoring service said. 


    An American aid worker kidnapped last summer in Pakistan resurfaced Monday morning in a video message released by al-Qaida. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    "Therefore, as a Jew, I am appealing to you, Prime Minister Netanyahu, the head of the Jewish State of Israel, as one Jew to another, to please intervene on my behalf, to work with the mujahideen and to accept their demands so that I can be released and returned to my family, see my wife, my children and my grandchildren again," SITE quoted Weinstein as saying in a video released by al-Qaida. 


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Weinstein, who was kidnapped in the central Pakistani city of Lahore in August 2011, pleaded with Obama in a similar recording in May, saying his life was in the president's hands. 

    Al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahri said in December the group was responsible for Weinstein's abduction and demanded the release of all those in U.S. detention for ties to his Islamist militant group or the Taliban. 

    He also demanded an end to airstrikes by the United States and its allies against militants in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Yemen and Somalia and Gaza. 

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Protesters storm US Embassy in Yemeni capital
    • Libya pledges to help US catch American officials' killers
    • US won't rule out Islamist link in killing of US ambassador to Libya
    • US Ambassador Chris Stevens was 'courageous and exemplary,' Obama says
    • Despite dark past, young Israelis seek new lives in German capital
    • No Obama-Netanyahu meeting as rift over Iran widens

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook


     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    160 comments

    I feel bad for him, but it wasn't a very smart place for a Jew to be. Second, typical of terrorists to terrorize a helpless & defensless man. Plus, ask us to release other pieces of crap from prisons. Just shows how desperate they are. They're losing their "war" against us. (Their "war" being ki …

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    Explore related topics: pakistan, al-qaida, obama, hostage, featured, netanyahu, warren-weinstein
  • 10
    Jul
    2012
    3:46am, EDT

    Police: Armed man surrenders after Paris standoff

    An armed man has been taken into custody by police near Paris, France, after allegedly taking several adults and children hostage at a nursery school. TODAY's Natalie Morales has more details.

    By The Associated Press

    Updated at 7:25 a.m. ET: PARIS - An armed man briefly took an adult hostage at a nursery school south of Paris on Tuesday. 

    The intruder, who entered the school in Vitry-sur-Seine on the southern edge of the capital shortly before opening time, freed the hostage after a few hours and later surrendered to police, said Ludovic Monier, a policeman at the scene.

    "At 12.10 (6:10 a.m. ET) the hostage-taker was taken out (of the building) calmly ... without any shots fired," Monier told reporters. 

    Some children were initially also taken hostage but were released unharmed.

    Kenzo Tribouillard / AFP - Getty Images

    Members of a RAID special police unit outside a school in Vitry-sur-Seine on Tuesday.

    An official said the last remaining adult held was the parent of one of the children. French schools are on summer vacation but are running summer activities.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Outrage grows after Afghan woman's execution caught on video
    • Egypt's new president defies the military, orders parliament to reconvene
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    • 6 NATO troops killed by roadside bomb in Afghanistan
    • Want to get rich in China? Foil a hijacking

    Follow World News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    59 comments

    Let me guess. The person was an Arab-Muslim. How much you want to bet?

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    Explore related topics: france, paris, school, hostage, crime-courts
  • 27
    Apr
    2012
    9:29am, EDT

    London street evacuated after man 'with grievance' storms office

    Ben Stansall / AFP - Getty Images

    Debris litters the pavement and road in front of police vehicles below an office building were according to reports an armed man was causing a disturbance in central London on Friday.

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com and David Wyllie, breakingnews.com

    Updated at 11:48 a.m. ET: An area of central London was evacuated by armed police Friday after a man “with a grievance” stormed a fifth floor office, leading to reports he had taken some workers inside hostage.

    Police, explosives experts and hostage negotiators were sent to the building, on the city’s Tottenham Court Road. Officers found no hostages, and the man was arrested at the scene. Nobody was injured. 


    Earlier, the suspect was seen tossing papers and electrical equipment out of the window of the office, which belongs to a truck driver training company.

    London’s Metropolitan Police Service spokesman described the suspect as a 50-year-old man “with a grievance” who was in a “very distressed state”.

    The incident began at 11:59 p.m. local time (5:59 a.m. ET). Pictures posted on Twitter showed the items being thrown from the window onto the street below.

    A large section of the street - one of the busiest in the city, leading north from Oxford Street - was sealed off, and a nearby Underground station closed to passengers, causing widespread congestion.

    Ben Stansall / AFP - Getty Images

    Debris falls from the window of an office building a man was causing a disturbance in central London on Friday.

    The building, Shropshire House, is close to the offices of news website, The Huffington Post UK. The site’s executive editor, Stephen Hull, posted on Twitter that Abby Baafi, 27, an employee of the HGV company, said the suspect had failed a training course and wanted his money back.

    Tamsin Kelly, who works in a neighboring building, told the BBC: "Two men ran into the building and said the man had a flamethrower and canisters of gas.

    "The two men told us they had been let go as they were parents and we were told to leave the building."

    Leon Farrell, 25, a product manager who works for AOL in Capper Street, just off Tottenham Court Road, told the BBC: "Someone ran in to our office white as a sheet and said there was someone who had taken a few people hostage but let them go as they had kids."

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Report: Osama bin Laden's widows, kids headed to Saudi Arabia
    • Israel grapples with insecurity as it celebrates independence
    • At least four killed as two bombs hit Nigeria newspaper offices
    • Aiding terrorists? Syrian women risk all to help dissidents
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    • Analysts say North Korea's new missiles are fakes
    • Israeli military chief: I doubt Iran's 'rational' leadership will make nuclear bomb

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    8 comments

    Reports are he had been waiting 2 weeks to get his license and still had not been called to the window. The clerk said she was still on her break.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: britain, office, siege, london, uk, hostage, featured, alastair-jamieson
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