You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Africa: North
Libyans nixed el-Para deal
2004-07-06
Rebels holding the Sahara’s most-wanted surviving terror suspect accused Libya on Monday of spoiling a deal to surrender the Islamic extremist to the West. Amari Saifi, the former No. 2 man of Algeria’s violent Salafist Group for Call and Combat, was claimed captured by Chad rebels earlier this year as West African armed forces backed by France and the United States chased him across the Sahara. Chad rebels told The Associated Press on Monday they had turned over two of Saifi’s accomplices to Libyan agents at the two countries border on June 25. Libya, however, had failed to keep its word to turn over the two men to the West, Brahim Tchouma, an official in exile for the rebels’ Movement for Justice and Democracy in Chad, told the AP by telephone. As a result, Chad rebels were balking at turning over Saifi himself, Tchouma said."The Libyans didn’t want to cooperate, and so we have stopped our negotiations" with them, Tchouma said.
Q-man is forgetting that he's still on probation.
The rebel official also denied a widely cited report Sunday that Libya had captured Salafists in the Chad rebels’ own regional base, as detailed in the French Le Journal du Dimanche newspaper. The newspaper claimed Salafists there were planning terror attacks on French and U.S. interests in Africa. "That’s a joke, but nothing coming from Libya surprises us," Tchouma said.
"Those Libyans, wotta buncha pranksters!
It appeared the Libyan claim may have been related to suggestions that at least one faction of Tchouma’s own group was operating under the direction of the Algerian terror group, in the remote Sahara region of Tibesti. The Chad rebel official denied it, saying, "No, no! Certainly not! We will fight any suggestion that we have launched a single terrorist act." Tchouma said Monday that the Chad rebels captured the fleeing al Para and his cohorts without a shot fired. "They were very tired men, who had been wandering lost about 10 days. We captured them without combat," the rebel leader said. He identified the two accomplices surrendered to the Libyans late last month only as Nourradine Grega and a Mr. Blonde Billal. Western diplomats and others have accused the Chad rebels of shopping al Para himself among Western and African countries in search of reward money. An official with one of the countries involved in the situation told the AP on Sunday that $600,000 esd being sought for al Para’s surrender. Tchouma said negotiations had returned now to the Algerians. "We haven’t demanded a ransom, but we wouldn’t refuse if one of those involved gave us something for delivering al Para," he said. For now, "he’s still in our hands, in Tibesti," a remote, mountainous area of Chad.
Posted by:Dan Darling

00:00