France confirms, one of the key leaders of Al-Qaeda in
the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), Abdelhamid Abou Zeid, had been killed in
fighting with French-led forces in northern Mali. he is considered
one of the most radical leaders in Al-Qaeda's north African branch,
46-year-old credited with having significantly expanded the terrorist
group's field of operation to Tunisia and Niger, and for kidnapping
activities across the region.
French President Francois Hollande
"confirms Abdelhamid Abou Zeid's death with certainty during fighting
led by the French army in the Ifoghas mountains in northern Mali in late
February", the Elysee palace said in a statement."The elimination of one of the main leaders of AQIM marks an important stage in the fight against terrorism in the Sahel."
Abou
Zeid's death was first announced on March 1 by Chadian President Idriss
Deby Itno, whose army is fighting alongside French troops to secure the
Ifoghas.Two days later, the Chadian army also announced it had
killed Algerian Islamist militant Mokhtar Belmokhtar, the other historic
leader of Al-Qaeda's north African branch.
French Foreign
Minister Laurent Fabius earlier said after fierce fighting in the Ifoghas in
late February that DNA tests would be carried out to determine whether
the two had in fact been killed. France has still not
confirmed the death of Belmokhtar, who split from Al-Qaeda and
masterminded a January raid on an Algerian gas plant that left 38
hostages dead.
Abou Zeid had a reputation for being a severe, aloof character with an unflinching capacity for violence when required.Born
in Debdeb in Algeria, close to the border with Libya, Abou Zeid was a
young activist in the FIS Islamist movement that won the country's first
democratic elections in 1991 but was denied power. He then disappeared
underground for most of the Ninety's.He re-emerged spectacularly in
2003 as second in command of the GSPC group which kidnapped 32
foreigners in southern Algeria, and that would later, along with several
other organisations, evolve into AQIM.
June 2009, his men kidnapped British tourist Edwin Dyer. According to multiple witnesses, Abou Zeid personally beheaded him.French
aid worker Pierre Camatte, who was held by Abou Zeid's henchmen for 89
days at the end of 2009, said the leader's death would severely hamper
AQIM."The organisation has been decapitated," he said.
Camatte
met the man responsible for his kidnapping four times and recalls a
distinctly cold character. "The other kidnappers consulted him all the
time but he mixed very little with them," the aid worker told media.
Abou Zeid, whose real name is Mohamed Ghdir according to Algerian
court documents was considered a deputy to AQIM's "Saharan emir"
Yahia Djouadi and commanded a katiba, or battalion, of fighters from
Mauritania, Algeria and Mali that was known as Tareq Ibn Ziyad. Mali
descended into chaos in the wake of a March 2012 coup, as
Al-Qaeda-linked Islamist rebels capitalised on the power vacuum to seize
a Texas-sized triangle of desert territory in the north. Media agencies
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