Chad claims killed mastermind of Algerian gas plant bloodbath
N’DJAMENA,
 Chad: Chad said its troops in northern Mali on Saturday killed the 
one-eyed Islamist leader who masterminded an assault on an Algerian gas 
plant that left 37 foreign hostages dead in January.
The
 Chadian army, whose troops have been at the forefront of the hunt for 
Al Qaeda-linked fighters hiding in northern Mali, said Mokhtar 
Belmokhtar was killed during an operation in the Ifogha mountains.
The
 Algerian national, a ruthless Afghanistan veteran whose smuggling 
activities earned him the nickname of “Mr Marlboro”, had broken away 
from Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) weeks ago to form a group 
called Signatories in Blood.
The 
report of his death came after Chadian President Idriss Deby Itno 
announced on Friday that his forces had killed Abou Zeid, the top AQIM 
commander in Mali, a few days earlier. A Mauritanian news agency said he
 was killed by a French airstrike.
If
 the deaths are confirmed, the French-led military coalition fighting in
 northern Mali will have eliminated the Sahel region’s two historical 
Al-Qaeda leaders and decapitated the jihadist insurgency in Mali.
“The
 Chadian forces in Mali completely destroyed the main jihadist base in 
Adrar of the Ifoghas mountains” at 1200 GMT, an army statement said, 
adding that several militants were killed “including leader Mokhtar 
Belmokhtar”.
Belmokhtar, 40, was seen
 several times in the main northern Malian cities of Timbuktu and Gao 
after AQIM and its allies took over northern Mali in April 2012.
He quit AQIM last year and in December the creation of his new group was announced.

Chadian soldiers prepare to leave a military camp on the outskirts of Niamey on January 24, 2013, on their way to Mali
© AFP
© AFP
In
 January, days after France’s surprise decision to send in fighter jets 
and troops to assist the Malian government reconquer the north, 
Belmokhtar claimed the attack on the In Amenas gas plant in southern 
Algeria.
 The spectacular attack on 
the isolated facility, which was jointly operated by British, US and 
Norwegian oil companies, ended in a bloodbath, with 38 hostages killed 
by the time an Algerian raid ended the crisis.
Among the victims were 37 foreigners, from Britain, Norway, Japan and other nations.
No
 other source has yet confirmed Belmokhtar’s death, and foreign 
governments were still trying to confirm that Belmokhtar’s ex-boss in 
the AQIM hierarchy, Abou Zeid, was indeed dead.
Chad’s
 Deby said his troops killed Abou Zeid during a major battle on February
 22 that moreover left 26 Chadian soldiers dead. But the private 
Mauritanian news agency Sahara Medias had a different story.
It
 said Abou Zeid, 46, one of the most wanted men in Africa, was killed 
“four days ago” in a French air strike during a clash between a unit he 
was leading and the Chadian platoon that had suffered the 26 losses days
 earlier.
Sahara Medias said the 
strike occurred in the mountainous region of Tigharghar near the border 
with Algeria and added that “extremely well-informed sources” had 
confirmed Abou Zeid’s killing.
– No confirmation in jihadist Internet forums –
Analysts
 have suggested Abou Zeid’s death could spell AQIM’s doom, with 
breakaway jihadist groups and other radical Islamist movements now 
thriving in the region. But while Washington described the report as 
“very credible”, France has so far treated it with caution.

Malian soldiers arrive with prisoners in Kadji, on the Niger river on March 1, 2013
© AFP
© AFP
Algeria’s
 El Khabar newspaper said Saturday that Algerian security services, who 
were the first to report Abou Zeid’s death, had found his personal 
weapon and examined a body believed to be his.
“Confirmation
 of Abou Zeid’s death remains linked to the results of DNA tests done on
 Thursday by Algeria on two members of his family,” it said.
Mauritanian
 expert Mohamed Mahmoud Ould Aboulmaali pointed out that Algeria had 
announced his death several times in the past and that Chad needed 
morale-boosting news after suffering such heavy losses.
Matthieu
 Guidere, a French university professor and Al-Qaeda specialist, 
moreover voiced caution in the absence of any confirmation on jihadist 
Internet forums.
“Experience shows that jihadists never try to hide their dead and immediately broadcast their martyrdom,” he said.
Abou Zeid was believed to be holding a number of Western hostages, including four French citizens kidnapped in Niger in 2010.
He and Belmokhtar were directly involved in most of the kidnappings of foreigners that have plagued the region in recent years.
Guidere
 said Abou Zeid had adopted such a complex line since reaching the top 
of AQIM’s operational command that many of his lieutenants had left the 
group to join other organisations or launch their own.
One
 of the main splinters is the Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West 
Africa (MUJAO), which first emerged last year and was battling African 
forces near the main northern city of Gao as recently as Friday.
“We
 waged a tough battle against Malian troops and their French accomplices
 around 60 kilometres (35 miles) east of Gao on Friday,” MUJAO spokesman
 Abou Walid Sahraoui told AFP.
“We’ll see after approximately the death toll,” he said.
A
 Malian soldier who claimed he took part in the fighting said the 
operation had left a MUJAO base destroyed and “many dead” among the 
Islamists.
Source – Thenewstribe
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