“Missing” Guantanamo returnee back at home: family

(Reuters) – An Algerian repatriated from the U.S. military prison in Guantanamo Bay was resting at home on Monday, his family said, ending a week-long search for him that prompted rights groups to say he could be suffering abuse.

Uncertainty over the whereabouts of Abdul Aziz Naji had fueled allegations from rights campaigners that U.S. President Barack Obama’s push to close Guantanamo Bay was leaving former detainees at risk of mistreatment once they were sent home.

Naji, who had been held at Guantanamo since 2002, had told his lawyers he did not want to return to Algeria under any circumstances because he feared persecution from the Algerian government and Islamist militants there.

“He is back home, tired, but he is free,” his brother Hamza told Reuters by telephone from the town of Batna, 500 km (300 miles) east of the Algerian capital.

“He did not say that he had been abused during his detention,” he said.

Earlier, Algerian justice officials said a judge on Sunday had ordered Naji’s release after a period of detention — which they said was completely lawful — following his July 18 return from Guantanamo Bay to Algeria.

“Contrary to what has been falsely reported, this person’s case has been dealt with in the most complete transparency and in respect for the law, whether in terms of procedure or the length of his detention,” the Algiers prosecutor’s office said in a statement.

COURT APPEARANCE

The statement said Naji had been held in detention in Algeria in accordance with legislation allowing terrorism suspects to be held for up to 12 days before appearing in court.

It said he was freed after appearing before a judge on Sunday who put him under judicial control — which means he has to report regularly to police pending a decision on his case.

“He is at home in Batna,” said a judicial source who did not want to be identified. “He just needs to go every week to the local police station to sign a form.”

Obama has made a pledge to close down Guantanamo Bay, which has been condemned by civil liberties advocates since it was opened by the Bush administration in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks on U.S. cities.

But resettling inmates from the U.S. base on Cuba has proved difficult, and any evidence that former detainees are mistreated after being sent home could make it harder for Obama to meet his commitment.

U.S. rights groups said last week they were worried because Naji’s lawyers and family had been unable to locate him since his return. They said they believed he could be in secret detention in Algeria.

Algerian officials deny abusing prisoners. Rights groups say that before Naji’s return, 10 Algerians had been repatriated from Guantanamo Bay. Western diplomats say none of them has been mistreated since they came back.

(Writing by Christian Lowe; editing by Andrew Roche)

Sahara raid may endanger hostage: Algerian sources

ALGIERS, July 25 (Reuters) – The participation of French troops in a raid on an al Qaeda camp in the Sahara could increase the risk to the hostage they tried to rescue and strengthen the insurgents, Algerian security sources said.

Mauritanian troops said that, backed by French special forces, they killed fighters from al Qaeda’s north African wing AQIM at a base in Mali on Thursday. Paris said it had no news of 78-year-old hostage Michel Germaneau. [ID:nLDE66N08O]

Asked about the operation at the weekend, serving and former security officers in Algeria, the main base for al Qaeda’s north African wing where the government has long experience fighting the insurgents, said the operation was a failure on several levels.

“France failed to release its hostage. It failed to eliminate (local AQIM leader) Abu Zeid,” a former Algerian security officer who hunted insurgents for years said.

He said the potential repercussions went beyond that. “It angered the terrorist group which will now either demand a ransom or kill the hostage if it has not done it already,” the former officer, who did not want to be identified, told Reuters.

Algeria is sensitive about the role of former colonial ruler France in its backyard. It says the al Qaeda problem in the Sahara is best solved by the region’s states and bristles at any sign Western powers are acting without consultation.

A French Defence Ministry source said on Saturday Paris had “consulted” Spain on the operation and “informed” Mali and Algeria before the attack.

The source said the operation was launched after AQIM failed to provide proof that Germaneau was alive or engage in negotiations over him.

PROPAGANDA TOOL

One serving Algerian security official said the operation would help the insurgents recruit more followers by allowing them to cast their campaign as a fight against Western “infidels” and not just fellow Muslims.

“The failure will be used by the extremists to spread their anti-Western propaganda,” the security official, who did not want to be identified because he was not authorised to speak to the media, told Reuters.

Hardline Islamists already appeared to be exploiting the operation. “Mauritania made a big mistake when it opened its borders to France to kill our people in the land of Islam,” said Sheikh Abdelfetah Zeraoui, an Algerian cleric who represents the ultra-conservative Salafist strain of Islam.

“A Muslim should never help a non-Muslim to kill a Muslim,” he said on his website. The cleric advocates non-violence and his Salafist faith is shared by most of the insurgents.

Algerian security forces have been fighting Islamist insurgents since the early 1990s in a conflict in which an estimated 200,000 people have been killed, although the violence has subsided in the past few years.

AQIM’s senior leaders are all Algerians and the organisation evolved from an Algerian insurgent group called the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat.

A second serving Algerian security official told Reuters another problem with the French operation was that it ran counter to Algeria’s policy of promoting cooperation among Saharan states to defeat al Qaeda.

“France’s failure shows that our approach is the most appropriate,” said the official.

Algerian officials say only the countries of the region have the local knowledge needed to track-down the insurgents. They point to the creation of a joint military headquarters in the Sahara earlier this year as a big step forward. [ID:nLDE63Q2QV] (Additional reporting by John Irish in Paris; Editing by Andrew Dobbie)

Timeline: Militant attacks on African continent

(Reuters) – Here is a timeline on some of the major militant attacks in Africa in the last 15 years:

November 17, 1997 – Egypt’s biggest Islamic militant group, al-Gama’a al-Islamiya (Islamic Group), kill 58 foreign tourists and four Egyptians at the temples of Luxor.

August 7, 1998 – Truck bombs explode at U.S. embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, killing 224, including 12 Americans, and injuring thousands. All but 10 of the deaths are in Nairobi, where the damage is worse.

Nov 28, 2002 – Three suicide car bombers blow up the Mombasa Paradise resort hotel full of Israelis, – killing 15 other people – and wounding 80.

– On the same day, two missiles narrowly miss an Israeli Arkia Boeing 757 carrying 261 passengers on take-off from Mombasa airport.

May 16, 2003 – Suicide bombers using cars or explosive belts set off at least five blasts in Morocco’s biggest city Casablanca, killing 45 people including 13 attackers and wounding 60 people.

Oct 7, 2004 – Truck bomb attacks kill 34 people and wounds 120 in the Hilton hotel at the Egyptian border resort of Taba and in two other explosions which hit backpacker beaches near the resort of Nuweiba southwest of Taba.

July 23, 2005 – In Egypt car bombs rip through hotels and shopping areas in Sharm el-Sheikh killing 67 and wounding more than 200, including some foreigners.

April 24, 2006 – Three bomb blasts in the Egyptian Sinai resort of Dahab kill 20 people. Sixty-two were wounded.

April 11, 2007 – Suicide bombs kill 33 people in central Algiers. The bombings were the first large bomb attacks in the center of Algiers in more than a decade. They were later claimed by the al Qaeda Organisation in the Islamic Maghreb.

December 11, 2007 – Two blasts kill at least 37 people including 17 U.N. staff in Algiers at U.N. offices in Hydra district and the Constitutional Court in Ben Aknoun district.

August 19, 2008 – A bomb attack, targeting a paramilitary gendarmerie training school at Issers, 55 km (34 miles) east of Algiers, kills 43. At least 38 people are wounded.

June 18, 2009 – Suicide bombing kills Somalia’s security minister and at least 30 other people in hotel in Baladwayne in attack blamed by officials on Shabaab insurgents.

Dec 3, 2009 – Suicide bomber kills 22 people including three government ministers at Mogadishu’s Shamo Hotel. In February 2010 sports minister dies of wounds sustained in the attack, blamed by officials on al Shabaab.

January 8, 2010 – A Togo soccer team bus, traveling from the Republic of Congo to the African Nations Cup in Angola, was attacked in Cabinda province. Two people were killed and seven wounded.

– The Front for the Liberation of the Enclave of Cabinda (FLEC), who have fought for independence of the oil-producing province, claimed responsibility for the attack.

July 11 – Suspected Somali Islamists carry out two bomb attacks that kill at least 74 people in Kampala, Uganda, at a restaurant and a sports club packed with soccer fans watching the final moments of World Cup final.

(Writing by David Cutler, London Editorial Reference Unit)

Australia fined 10,000 dollars for skipping Davis Cup tie

Australia fined 10,000 dollars for skipping Davis Cup tie London – The 28-time Davis Cup champion Australia were fined 10,000 dollars Friday but will not be banned for failing to play a Davis Cup tie this month in Chennai, India.

The visitors had refused to compete in what Tennis Australia considered an unsafe environment after the November, 2008, terror attacks in the city and had proposed a neutral venue.

“The ITF’s Davis Cup Committee decided that Australia would not be suspended from the 2010 competition or relegated from Asia/Oceania Zone Group I,” the International Tennis Federation said in a statement.

“Australia will lose choice of ground for their next home tie regardless of the opponent and will pay a fine of 10,000 dollars. Australia will also be liable for costs to both the ITF and to the All India Tennis Association to be determined at a later date.”

The International Tennis Federation awarded the win to India for the May 8-10 Asian zonal tie.

The last time a nation refused to play a tie over political concerns was in 2004 when Denmark did not travel to Algiers over security concerns. The country was not suspended and competed in 2005.

Australia had been expecting to pay a fine of around 25,000 dollars. (dpa)

Morocco blames Algiers for W.Sahara “truce breach”

RABAT (Reuters) – Morocco blamed Algeria on Saturday for a “serious and blatant” violation by the Polisario Front of an 18-year-long ceasefire in the disputed Western Sahara and urged the United Nations to intervene.

Some 1,400 supporters of the Algeria-backed Polisario Front independence movement, including foreigners, crossed the border from Algeria into a closed military zone where they uprooted barbed wire and fired shots in the air, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

It accused Algeria and the Polisario of trying to scuttle efforts to forge a peaceful solution to the conflict before a U.N. Security Council meeting on the dispute later this month.

Rabat and the Polisario Front have often accused one another of breaching the U.N.-supervised military truce.

But diplomats believe it is the first time in many years that Rabat has linked Algiers directly to an alleged violation.

They feared this would strain links between Algeria and Morocco, both of whose cooperation is seen by Western powers as crucial to the fight against al Qeada in north and sub-Saharan Africa and against illegal migration.

“…this action, which was initiated and carried out from Algerian territory, confirms the direct responsibility of this country in its preparation and implementation,” the Moroccan ministry said.

“This incident is (in line with) repeated attempts by Algeria and Polisario aimed at scuttling U.N. efforts to relaunch the dynamic of negotiations,” it added.

The ministry called on the United Nations to “assume responsibility and take the required actions.”

The dispute over Western Sahara, which is rich in phosphates and fish and may have offshore oil, has poisoned ties between Morocco and Algeria and blocked badly needed economic cooperation and growth in north Africa.

U.N.-brokered mediation has so far failed to break a deadlock over whether the territory should be an autonomous region of Morocco, as Rabat proposes, or have a referendum on independence, as Polisario wants.

Officials in Algiers and Polisario spokespeople were not immediately available to comment.

Morocco’s foreign ministry said an unspecified number of Polisario members and supporters were wounded when they stepped into a minefield and triggered a mine explosion.

The Algerian daily el Khabar said Saturday that at least three people were hurt and some 200 foreigners took part in the protest to back Polisario’s demand for an independent state.

Political sources in Rabat said one of those wounded was a Polisario member one of whose legs was severed by the explosion near Mahbes, one of the battlefields where Polisario guerrillas and Moroccan troops clashed in the 1980s.

(Reporting by Lamine Ghanmi; editing by Tim Pearce)

Bouteflika wins third term as Algerian president

By Lamine Chikhi and Hamid Ould Ahmed

ALGIERS (Reuters) – President Abdelaziz Bouteflika took 90.24 percent of the vote in a presidential election to win a third five-year term as leader of Algeria, an oil producer with a lingering Islamist insurgency.

An opposition party which had called for a boycott of the polls alleged fraud on an “industrial scale” and a newspaper reported rioting east of the capital — a reminder of the anger over poverty and unemployment felt in parts of the country.

Announcing the result on Friday, Algerian Interior Minister Noureddine Yazid Zerhouni said: “This is a victory for the Algerian nation as it builds democracy.”

A close Bouteflika ally, Zerhouni said that if there were any voting irregularities they could not have had a significant effect on the result in the vast Muslim country that lies across the Mediterranean from the European Union.

The newspaper El Watan said on its website people protesting against the result blocked roads with burning tires and clashed with police in Kabylie province east of Algiers. The report could not immediately be confirmed.

The mountainous province has a history of anti-government protests. Two police officers were injured in an explosion at a polling station there during voting on Thursday.

Algeria cooperates with the United States in its fight against al Qaeda. U.S. State Department spokesman Richard Aker acknowledged some concern about fraud allegations, but said: “We are looking forward to working with President Bouteflika.”

Victory for Bouteflika, 72, a veteran of Algeria’s war of independence from France, was never in doubt. He faced only lightweight rivals in the ballot and had a well-funded campaign.

Election officials put turnout at just over 74 percent, higher than in the last presidential vote and a sign that many of Algeria’s 34 million people ignored the opposition calls for a boycott.

“The high turnout means that the supporters of the boycott have neither political nor social influence,” said Mohamed Lagab, professor of political science at Algiers University.

FRAUD ALLEGATIONS

Algerian lawmakers cleared the way for Bouteflika to stand for a third term by abolishing term limits, a move that critics said could allow him to serve as president for life.

The opposition Front of Socialist Forces accused the authorities of artificially inflating the turnout. “(There was) a real tsunami of massive fraud which reached an industrial scale,” the party said in a statement.

In its Friday edition, El Watan published a front-page caricature of Bouteflika with a crown on his head. “A coronation that surprised no one,” it said.

The election result matters to the outside world because Algeria, an OPEC member, has the world’s 15th largest oil reserves and accounts for 20 percent of the EU’s gas imports.

European governments fear turmoil in Algeria could led to a flood of illegal migrants.

Supporters say Bouteflika deserves credit for steering Africa’s second-largest country back to stability after the government and Islamists fought a civil conflict in which an estimated 150,000 people were killed in the 1990s.

Some sections of the population feel disenfranchised from the political process and analysts say that helps feed Algeria’s low-level Islamist insurgency, now affiliated to al Qaeda.

(Additional reporting by Washington bureau; Writing by Christian Lowe; Editing by Jonathan Wright )

Algeria’s president wins election

Algiers, April 10 (DPA) Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika was elected to an unprecedented third five-year term with 90.24 percent of the vote, Interior Minister Nouredine Yazid Zerhouni announced Friday.

The re-election of the 72-year-old Bouteflika was considered a foregone conclusion after the two main opposition parties decided to boycott Thursday’s vote, alleging that it had been ‘rigged in advance’.

The five candidates who stood against Bouteflika were marginal political figures little known to the general public.

Louisa Hanoun of the extreme left-wing Workers Party (PT) finished second with 4.22 percent of the vote, followed by Moussa Touati of the Algerian National Front, with 2.31 percent.

The higher-than-expected voter turnout was also a triumph for Bouteflika. According to official figures, a record 74.54 percent of Algeria’s 20.6 million eligible voters cast their ballots Thursday.

During his campaign the president had urged people to go to polling stations, even if it meant voting against him. On Wednesday, he had said that only a turnout of 70 percent or better would give him a true mandate.

Touati said the turnout figures were ‘exaggerated,’ while Ali Fawzi Rebaine, the candidate from the nationalist Ahd 54 party, who received less than 1 percent of the vote, charged that the vote was marked by ‘intimidations’.

The election was marred by a number of violent incidents, including a bombing at a polling station in the eastern region of Kabylie in which two police officers were injured.

However, there were no reports of attempts by Islamist terrorists to disrupt the vote, as the government in Algiers had feared. These fears had moved the interior ministry to deploy more than 20,000 police officers in and around the capital.

Bouteflika had campaigned on a platform of stability and economic growth. He promised amnesty to every Islamic terrorist who lays down his arms and vowed to construct 1.5 million new homes and create at least the same number of new jobs.

Algeria’s Bouteflika wins re-election with over 90 per cent of vote

Algiers – Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika was elected to an unprecedented third term with 90.24 per cent of the vote, Interior Minister Nouredine Yazid Zerhouni announced Friday. The re-election of the 72-year-old Bouteflika was considered a foregone conclusion after the two main opposition parties decided to boycott the vote, alleging that it had been “rigged in advance.”

The five candidates who stood against Bouteflika were marginal political figures little known by the general public.

Analysts were surprised by higher than expected voter turnout. According to official figures, 74.54 per cent of Algeria’s 20.6 million eligible voters cast their ballots in Thursday’s vote.

During his campaign he urged people to go to polling stations, even if it meant voting against him. On Wednesday, he had said that only a turnout of 70 per cent or better would give him a true mandate.(dpa)

Apathy main election rival for Algeria’s Bouteflika

Algerians voted on Thursday in an election President Abdelaziz Bouteflika needs to win convincingly to show he can re-connect with disillusioned voters and snuff out a lingering Islamist insurgency.

Bouteflika, a 72-year-old veteran of Algeria’s war for independence from France, is expected to win by a big margin but if voters stay away from the polls that could boost opponents — including Islamists — who say the vote is a charade.

“Abstentions, the one and only adversary of Abdelaziz Bouteflika, could upset all the calculations for the election,” Le Soir D’Algerie newspaper wrote in its Thursday edition.

Algerian lawmakers, most of them loyal to Bouteflika, cleared the way for him to stand for re-election last year by abolishing constitutional term limits. Critics said that could allow him to serve as president-for-life.

The five other candidates in the race present no real challenge, and several opposition figures not taking part have urged their supporters either to put blank voting slips in the ballot box or stay at home.

About an hour after voting started in the capital, a teeming city of white-washed French colonial buildings perched above the Mediterranean Sea, only a trickle of voters were making their way to central polling stations.

Election officials said they expected numbers to pick up later. Algerian television showed footage of long queues outside polling stations elsewhere, along with pre-recorded appeals for people to go out and vote.

“I voted today for Bouteflika because I think he needs to continue his programme. We need peace and economic growth to create jobs,” said industrial worker Abdelwahab Ziani, 42, as he cast his ballot in central Algiers.

LOW-LEVEL INSURGENCY

Supporters say Bouteflika deserves credit for steering Algeria, an oil and gas producer across the water from the European Union, back to stability after a civil conflict in the 1990s that killed an estimated 150,000 people.

But a rump of rebels affiliated to al Qaeda mount occasional attacks — a low-level insurgency that security analysts say feeds off anger among Algeria’s millions of unemployed young people who feel their government has let them down.

Worried that the rebels may try to mount an attack to coincide with the vote, police set up extra road blocks around the capital, adding to already formidable security measures.

A smiling Bouteflika, accompanied by his young nephew, cast his ballot at a polling station in the upmarket El Biar district of Algiers, then left without speaking to reporters.

He has promised to spend $150 billion on development projects and create 3 million jobs, his remedy for an economy in which energy accounts for about 96 percent of exports but where other sectors have been choked by red tape and under-investment.

Bouteflika’s ability to retain legitimacy in the eyes of Algeria’s 34 million people matters to the outside world: his OPEC-member country has the world’s 15th biggest oil reserves and accounts for 20 percent of the EU’s gas imports.

European governments fear renewed conflict or economic collapse could unleash a flood of illegal migrants into the EU, while the United States needs the support of Bouteflika’s government in its global fight against al Qaeda.

Polling stations are scheduled to close at 8 p.m. (1900 GMT), but no results will be released until Friday when the Interior Ministry will announce the winner.

Algerian capital under high security in presidential election

Algiers – More than 20,000 police officers were deployed on Thursday in and around the Algerian capital Algiers as voters went to the polls to elect a new president.

The city was under a security alert because officials feared that Islamic terrorists would attempt to disrupt the vote.

In addition, some 200 international observers, including 85 sent by the Arab League, were on hand to scrutinize the election, the outcome of which is universally considered a foregone conclusion.

With the two main opposition parties boycotting the vote, the incumbent, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, is almost certain to win election to a third five-year term against five opponents with only marginal support.

However, a crucial indication of the depth of opposition to Bouteflika and his government will be how many of the 20.6 million eligible voters cast their ballots.

Early indications in Algiers were that turnout could be low, as mostly the elderly appeared at polling stations in the capital in the morning.

However, according to tradition, the men generally cast their ballots later in the morning and women voted in the afternoon.

Results of the vote were eexpected to be announced Friday. (dpa)

Suspected Islamic terrorists kill three in Algeria

Algiers – Three guards working on a foreign construction project in Algeria have been killed by suspected Islamic terrorists, local media reported on Thursday.

The three brothers were traveling in their car near the eastern port city of Jijel when they were confronted by a group of armed men, who shot the victims before slitting their throats.

The incident occurred late Wednesday, on the eve of elections that are expected to return President Abdelaziz Bouteflika to office for an unprecedented third five-year term.

Dozens of people have died in terrorist-related violence in the weeks preceding the vote. (dpa)

Report: Presumed Islamist terrorists kill nine in Algeria

Report: Presumed Islamist terrorists kill nine in Algeria Paris – Nine employees of a security company were killed in an attack by presumed Islamist militants in eastern Algeria, the daily El Watan reported on Monday.

Two other people were injured during the attack on the dormitory housing the security agents who had been hired by the Sonelgaz gas company in Tuzrarane, some 350 kilometers east of the capital Algiers.

The attackers first launched grenades at the building before storming it. The victims worked for the security company Spas, which has been targeted by attacks on several previous occasions. dpa

CIA station chief in Algeria accused of raping Muslim women

London, Jan 29 (ANI): The CIA’s station chief in Algeria is under investigation over claims that he drugged and raped two Algerian women at his official residence.

Law enforcement sources told ABC News that the 41-year-old officer, named as Muslim convert Andrew Warren, had been sent home in October. He could face charges as early as next month

Two Algerian women came forward last September saying that Warner at his home in Algiers had sexually assaulted them.

Investigators from the Justice Department allegedly found more than a dozen secretly recorded videotapes of Warren performing sex acts with other women. An official said one woman appeared to be in a “semi-conscious state”.

Both women who came forward to complain and made sworn statements are Muslim, and the case could spark a strong reaction in the Arab world.

One of the women said she met Warner at the bar in the American Embassy before going to his residence, where she was drugged, The Telegraph reported.

Algiers is one of the most sensitive posts in the agency, as it works closely with local intelligence services against a branch of al-Qaeda that has been responsible for major bombings, including an attack in the capital last August that killed 48 people.

The CIA refused to confirm that the investigation was taking place, but a spokesman said: “I can assure you the agency would take seriously, and follow up on, any allegations of impropriety.”

ABC’s sources said the investigation had expanded to Egypt where the officer, who has not been named, served previously.

“This will be seen as the typical ugly American. My question is how the CIA would not have picked up on this in their own regular reviews of officers overseas,” said Bob Baer, a former CIA officer. (ANI)