ALGIERS, Algeria, Aug. 20, 2008

12 Dead In Algerian Car Bomb Attacks

Witnesses Say Twin Blasts Strike Hotel, Military Headquarters In North African Nation

  • A soldier stands in front of a damaged building after a suicide car bomber rammed into a police academy in the town of Les Issers, in the Boumerdes region, 35 miles east of Algiers, Aug. 19, 2008.

    A soldier stands in front of a damaged building after a suicide car bomber rammed into a police academy in the town of Les Issers, in the Boumerdes region, 35 miles east of Algiers, Aug. 19, 2008.  (AP Photo)

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(AP)  Two car bombs rocked a hotel and military headquarters in Algeria, killing 12 people Wednesday, a day after a suicide bombing nearby killed 43. The double attack is the sixth major terrorist action this month in the North African nation.

No group has claimed responsibility for the recent spate of killings, including the two remote-controlled car bombs that struck the city of Bouira on Wednesday. But all six occurred in the area east of the capital where militants from an Algerian offshoot of al Qaeda are suspected to operate.

Violence in this gas- and oil-rich U.S. ally has surged since the homegrown extremist group GSPC, which led a deadly insurgency in the 1990s, joined Osama bin Laden's network in 2006 and took the name Al Qaeda in Islamic North Africa.

The death toll surged to more than 70 this month alone, and the relentless bombings led many newspapers to question whether authorities have grown too lenient, or too weak, to fight Islamist extremists.

Terrorism expert Jean-Louis Bruguiere says the group is receiving military reinforcements from al Qaeda in Iraq — and using Algeria as a "platform" from which to spread instability throughout North Africa and possibly beyond.

"The security situation is deteriorating, and it's worrisome for Europe," said Bruguiere, formerly France's top counterterrorism judge and now the European Union coordinator of a terrorism finance tracking program jointly run with the United States.

Interior Minister Yazid Zehrouni, however, insisted the string of attacks suggest that extremist groups are "riddled with internal problems and are mainly aiming to raise internal troop morale."

Wednesday's two car bombs were triggered by remote control. The first hit a regional military command and injured four soldiers in Bouira, some 55 miles (90 kilometers) southeast of the capital, the state-run APS news agency reported.

A minute later, at least 12 people died and 27 were wounded when a second bomb exploded next to a nearby downtown hotel. Most of the victims were traveling in a bus that passed in front of the hotel, APS said.

All those who died and about 15 of the wounded were Algerian employees of SNC Lavalin, a Montreal-based engineering and construction firm, the company said in a statement. They were on the bus headed to work on a water treatment plant and distribution project.The number of injured was from the APs report.

Most victims were civilians traveling in a bus that passed in front of the hotel. Local hospital officials said they were workers from a construction company building a dam nearby.

The military barracks were most damaged. "Parts of the walls have fallen off, the fence is destroyed, cars are buried under the rubble," Abdellah Debbache, the Bouira correspondent of Algeria's Liberte newspaper, told The Associated Press by telephone.

A day earlier, a suicide bombing some 28 miles (45 kilometers) away in Les Issers killed 43 people in Algeria's biggest attack since the 1990s. The bomber targeted young students lining up to apply at a police academy, and at least 45 were injured.

"Terrorism: is the State powerless?" asked a large headline on the independent El Watan newspaper's cover, which carried a single, large photograph of the bloodbath.

Several other Algerian newspapers also questioned whether a "national reconciliation" policy voted in 2005 to grant widespread amnesty to Islamists was giving radical groups too much space to regroup and find new support.

Algeria's insurgency broke out in 1992 when the secular-leaning army canceled legislative elections that an Islamist party was expected to win, and it claimed up to 200,000 lives. The insurgency largely died out before insurgents got a new boost by joining forces with al Qaeda.

Today, extremists focus their efforts against security forces and foreigners.

On Sunday, extremists ambushed and then beheaded 12 people, including 11 security officials in Skikda in eastern Algeria. A soldier and the head of the nearby military region of Jijel were killed on Aug. 14; a suicide bombing four days earlier killed eight people at a police station in Zemmouri next to Algiers. A suicide bombing wounded 25 on Aug. 3.

Several newspapers said the GSPC's original founder issued a condemnation of Tuesday's attacks. "Quit all subversive action," Hassan Hattab was quoted as saying, calling the armed insurgency "a dead end." Hattab, who has been dismissed by the more militant members of the GSPC, lives in an undisclosed location. The authenticity of his statement could not be independently verified.


© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by downsteamjim August 20, 2008 9:02 PM EDT
Got to love Nancy Naive. Her plan is for the French to intervene. What a laugh, the Algerians have already tossed the entire French Army out on its ear.
Reply to this comment
by beboldin09 August 20, 2008 4:51 PM EDT
More episodes from the religion of "peace" Islam.

Gee what a shocker......
Reply to this comment
by jerr11 August 20, 2008 4:41 PM EDT
What''s wrong with these muslims?

Wherever there''s trouble you can be sure there''s a muslim involved.

They need to forget the 72 virgins and live with their ugly wives in this lifetime.

Well the good news.

The Algerian Govt can make up some stories about WMDs and invade Iraq.

Reply to this comment
by bob5ford August 20, 2008 1:50 PM EDT
Whoever the bombers were the entire world has to make it clear that this is not acceptable. If that takes eliminating a few or many thousands of terrorists then it will have to be done. If it is not, they will win.
Reply to this comment
by notblue August 20, 2008 12:47 PM EDT
Oh yes, those French "are real pros", LOL! Remember the riots! LOL!
Reply to this comment
by beehive21-2009 August 20, 2008 12:40 PM EDT
Muslims are now bombing all over the world, we see it.If your a Muslim , now is time too get your killer robots under control,or be terminated.
Reply to this comment
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