23 dead, 160 hurt in 2 Algiers bombings
ICC NOTE: Political Islam resurges in North Africa , a definite concern for the progress North African countries were making in creating a more secular atmosphere for citizens.
By Aomar Ouali
4/11/07 Algeria For the full article (Associated Press) Bombs heavily damaged the prime minister’s office and a police station Wednesday, killing at least 23 people and wounding about 160, the country’s official news agency said. Al-Jazeera television said it received a claim of responsibility from al-Qaida in the Maghreb for both bombings.
The station said it received a telephone call from a spokesman for Al-Qaida in Islamic North Africa claiming responsibility for both attacks. The station gave no further details.
The group was formerly known as the Salafist Group for Call and Combat known by its French abbreviation GSPC but changed its name when it announced its alliance with al-Qaida in January.
Prime Minister Abdelaziz Belkhadem, who was unhurt, said that militants believed to be linked to al-Qaida were responsible for the “cowardly, criminal terrorist act” as he spoke to reporters outside his wrecked offices.
No group claimed responsibility.
The attacks were a devastating setback for the North African nation’s efforts to close the chapter on its Islamic insurgency that has killed 200,000 people. After years of relative calm, an al-Qaida affiliate recently has recently waged several smaller attacks in the oil- and gas-rich nation.
Belkhadem declined to say how many had been killed or wounded.
A charred, wrecked car lay on the pavement about 98 feet from the gates of the government building a modern white, block-like high-rise that also houses the Interior Ministry. It was not immediately clear if the car had been involved in the bombing.
Police cordoned off stairs leading up to the government building with orange police tape, and paramedics raced up the steps with stretchers. Paramedics escorted a man with blood on his head into an ambulance. Another woman, looking dazed and in tears, was checked for head injuries.
The explosion at about 10:45 local time caused windows to rattle at least a half-mile away. Few details were immediately available about the other attack east of the capital.
Algeria ‘s insurgency broke out in 1992, after the army canceled legislative elections that an Islamic party appeared set to win.
Since then, violence related to the insurgency has left an estimated 200,000 dead civilians, soldiers and Islamic fighters according to the government. Algeria ‘s military led a crackdown on militants hiding out in the country’s brush and mountains, while the government tried to reconcile the nation with several amnesty offers to militants willing to turn in their weapons.
Large-scale violence died down in the late 1990s, but skirmishes have surged in recent months as an al-Qaida affiliate carried out a deadly and carefully planned series of bomb attacks. Several targeted foreign workers.
A March 3 bombing of a bus carrying workers for a Russian company killed a Russian engineer and three Algerians. A December attack near Algiers and targeting a bus carrying foreign employees of an affiliate of Halliburton killed an Algerian and a Lebanese citizen.
Al-Qaida in Islamic North Africa the new name for the Salafist Group for Call and Combat, known by its French abbreviation GSPC claimed responsibility for both attacks.