jueves, 17 de enero de 2013

Algeria Gas Plant Siege: Warning From PM - Sky News

David Cameron has said Britain should be "prepared for the possibility of further bad news" over the hostage situation at a gas plant in Algeria.

The Prime Minister has postponed his speech tomorrow in the Netherlands on Europe to stay in the UK to deal with the crisis, Downing Street said.

One British citizen is known to have died in the crisis and several others have been caught up in it.

Mr Cameron said: "It's a fluid situation, it's ongoing, it's very uncertain. We should be prepared for the possibility of further bad news, very difficult news, in this extremely difficult situation."

News agencies said some people had been killed in the wake of a military strike to try to free foreign workers at the remote plant, while a number of hostages had reportedly been released.

Mauritania's ANI news agency reported the deaths citing one of the kidnappers who had earlier taken 41 people, including Britons, captive at the compound near the border with Libya.

And French president Francois Hollande said the hostage crisis was unfolding in "terrible conditions".

The official Algerian APS news agency said a number of foreign hostages were free. Among them was 36-year-old Irishman Stephen McFaul from west Belfast.

His father, Christopher McFaul, told Sky News he was "delighted" his son was no longer being held captive 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, said: "I can't even explain the excitement. I can't wait until he gets home again."

Algeria and its neighbours
The gas complex is at In Amenas, in eastern Algeria

He added he would tell him "he's never going back there and I'm not letting him".

APS said as many as 600 Algerian workers at the site managed to flee the plant, and an American military official said at least one US unarmed drone was flying over the complex.

A large explosion has been heard away from the accommodation block at the remote desert plant, Sky sources said.

News agency Reuters spoke to a local resident who said many people were killed in the military operation, which the Algerian government confirmed it was carrying out.

The Algerian government said it had to act "immediately" to intervene in the hostage crisis, according to Downing Street.

David Cameron's spokesman said Britain was not given prior notice of the operation, adding it was ongoing and the situation was "very grave and serious".

Mr Cameron was informed the operation was under way when he telephoned the Algerian prime minister at 11am today, the spokesman added.

And the British PM made clear he would have preferred to be informed in advance of the military action, the spokesman went on.

There have been conflicting reports as to the number of casualties, with Reuters citing a local source as saying six foreign hostages and eight rebels were killed.

The source said some hostages were still being held.

ANI said the attackers' spokesman had claimed that Algerian forces opened fire as the militants tried to leave the energy complex with hostages.

The facility is run jointly by BP, the Norwegian energy firm Statoil and the Algerian state oil company.

On Wednesday a Briton and an Algerian were killed when around 20 gunmen from an al Qaeda-backed group stormed the In Amenas facility.

Among the UK nationals taken hostage by the group were Scottish nationals, Scottish National Party leader Alex Salmond confirmed earlier.

Al Qaeda-linked militant group Katibat Moulathamine - The Masked Ones - claimed responsibility for the attack.

The group said it was retaliating for French military intervention against al Qaeda-backed rebels in neighbouring Mali, where France now has 1,400 troops on the ground.

Foreign Secretary William Hague earlier said he was sceptical the attack was a retaliation over the offensive against Islamist fighters in Mali because it would take longer to plan.

BP said it was evacuating a group of workers from Algeria after Islamist gunmen took dozens of foreigners hostage at the In Amenas plant.

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