Tuesday, November 19

Africa Qaeda leader’s death sentence

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ALGIERS (AFP)

An Algerian court sentenced the fugitive head of Al-Qaeda’s north African offshoot to death Tuesday for a string of 2007 attacks, including a deadly bombing at the prime minister’s office.

Abdelmalek Droukdel, leader of Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Magreb (AQIM), and eight co-defendants were sentenced in absentia for premeditated murder, membership of a terrorist group and attacks using explosives, said judge Tayeb Hillali of the court in Algiers.

They were among 18 people, nine of whom were absent, put on trial for three bomb attacks in Algiers on April 11, 2007 that killed 20 people and wounded 222.

The first attack saw a bomber drive an explosives-laden car into a guard post outside the government headquarters housing the prime minister’s office in central Algiers, killing 12 people and injuring 135.

Minutes later, bombers driving two cars triggered explosions in the eastern suburb of Bab Ezzouar, on the road to the international airport and not far from one of Algeria’s largest universities.

A fourth attack was thwarted when security officers defused a car bomb, according to court documents in the trial that opened on March 14, 2011.
Droukdel, a 41-year-old engineer by training whose alias is Abou Moussaab Abdelouadoud, fought in Afghanistan and is said to consider as his mentor Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian-born Al-Qaeda leader in Iraq killed by the US military in 2006.

He arrived at the head of what was then called the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat in 2004, muscling his way in by brutally eliminating rivals. The group has since changed its name.

He is seen by experts as a ruthless chief who introduced suicide bombings in Algeria.

Having learned about explosives during his military service, Droukdel has put together “suicide commandos” whose members are completely committed to him, experts say.

The fighters’ bedside reading is believed to include a military text written by their leader.

The other eight people sentenced were Abdessalam Samir, Ait Said Salem, Ait Said Meziane, Ziani Said, Ghiatou Rabah, Chemini Toufic, Niche Djamel and Bou Djalki Abderrahmane.

Lawyers for the remaining nine accused sought an adjournment of the trial on the grounds that four of their peers had pulled out and a fifth lawyer was absent, but the judge turned down the request and started reading out the indictments.

“We withdrew because the registrar illegally refused to accept our appeal against the adjournment, and the judge did not order him to oblige,” said lawyer Amine Sidhom.

AQIM also operates in Niger, Mali and Mauritania but its leadership is dominated by Algerians. It was founded in the late 1990s with the aim of toppling the Algerian government and creating an Islamic state.

In another trial on Monday, a court in Bouira in eastern Algeria sentenced Droukdel and three others to death in absentia and ordered the seizure of their goods and properties for terrorism, murder and massacres.

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