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World

Islamist group kidnaps Frenchman in Algeria

Aomar Ouali and Paul Schemm - The Philippine Star

ALGIERS — A splinter group from al-Qaeda's North African branch has kidnapped a French citizen and announced on yesterday that it will kill him unless France ends its participation in air strikes against the Islamic State group in Iraq.

In a video that appeared on social media, a masked member of a group calling itself Jund al-Khilafah, or Soldiers of the Caliphate, warned French President Francois Hollande that it would murder the hostage if France doesn't end its military actions against the Islamic State group in the next 24 hours.

The group said it was answering a call by IS spokesman Abu Muhammad al-Adnani to attack Americans and Europeans.

French President Francois Hollande spoke with Algerian Prime Minister Abdelmalek Sellal by phone, the French leader's office said in a statement, emphasizing the "total cooperation" between France and Algeria to try to find and free the Frenchman. It said authorities in the two countries were in constant contact.

French forces joined the US on Sept. 19 in carrying out airstrikes against forces from the Islamic State group which have overrun large swathes of Syria and Iraq.

The Frenchman appeared in the video flanked by two armed masked men and said he was taken hostage by the group on Sunday and reiterated its demands that French airstrikes end.

The Jund al-Khilafah group broke away from al-Qaeda's North African branch in recent weeks and has pledged allegiance to the Islamic State, which has emerged as a brutal rival to al-Qaeda.

al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb has remained loyal to the central al-Qaeda movement, led by Egyptian Ayman al-Zawahri and located along the Afghan-Pakistani border.

The rise of groups claiming allegiance to the Islamic State group is the latest sign of al-Qaeda's weakening influence in the face of its new rival's successes on the battlefield.

According to the Algerian Interior Ministry, the Frenchman and two Algerian companions were driving through the mountains near the village of Ait Ouabane when they were stopped by a group of armed men Sunday evening.

The gunmen released the Algerians and took the Frenchman, whom the ministry described as a 55-year-old mountain guide. The three had spent the night at a ski lodge near the town of Tikdjda, 110 kilometers (65 miles) from the capital, Algiers.

On Sunday, IS spokesman al-Adnani urged followers to kill Europeans and Americans, and "especially the spiteful and filthy French." The group has already beheaded two American journalists and a British aid worker.

Responding to the statement at the time, French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said he was confident of the country's security.

"This threat to kill civilians, added to the execution of hostages and to the massacres, is yet another demonstration of the barbarism of these terrorists, justifying our fight without truce or pause," Cazeneuve said yesterday.

Prior to the kidnapping yesterday, France's Foreign Ministry issued a statement saying Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius had called on ambassadors in 30 countries — many in Africa and the Middle East, and including Algeria — to "invite our compatriots to reinforce their vigilance in the face of the terrorist risk."

Algeria has been battling Islamist militants since the 1990s and in recent years has confined them to a few mountainous regions in the north of the country and in the Sahara desert in the extreme south.

al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb made millions of dollars over the last decade kidnapping Western tourists in the Sahara Desert.

In January 2013, another al-Qaeda splinter carried out a daring assault on an Algerian natural gas plant, taking dozens of foreigner workers hostage, who were all later killed when the military retook the plant.

ABU MUHAMMAD

ADNANI

AFRICA AND THE MIDDLE EAST

FRENCH

FRENCH PRESIDENT FRANCOIS HOLLANDE

GROUP

ISLAMIC MAGHREB

ISLAMIC STATE

NORTH AFRICAN

QAEDA

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