http://us.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/africa/01/03/algeria.security.reut/index.html

Top Algerian Islamic rebel arrested

 Monday, January 3, 2005 Posted: 10:23 AM EST (1523 GMT) 

ALGIERS, Algeria (Reuters) -- The leader of Algeria's second largest
Islamic rebel group has been arrested, the Interior Ministry said on
Monday, dealing a fresh blow to radical Muslim militants fighting the
secular government.
The arrest of Nourredine Boudiafi, head of the Armed Islamic Group
(GIA), came six months after the killing of Nabil Sahraoui, head of
the larger and more active Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat
(GSPC), North Africa's top extremist group which has ties to al Qaeda.
Boudiafi was detained during an operation that started on November 5
in Bab Ezzouar, on the outskirts of Algiers, the ministry said in a
statement carried by the official APS news agency. Authorities
dismantled several GIA support networks near the capital.
The statement did not say exactly when Boudiafi was detained and
ministry officials were not available for comment.
The GIA, which used to number thousands of fighters, was Algeria's top
rebel group until a few years ago and is known for deadly attacks on
security forces and civilians at the height of the Islamic insurgency
in the mid-1990s.
It has been weakened by dissidence since and has not claimed
responsibility for attacks in recent years.
Police chief Ali Tounsi said recently that between 300 and 500 rebels
were still active in Algeria, most in GSPC ranks.
Islamic militant groups took up arms after army-backed authorities
cancelled parliamentary elections a Muslim fundamentalist party was
poised to win in 1992.
More than 150,000 people, mostly civilians, have been killed since
then, according to human rights groups.
But violence has sharply declined after thousands of rebels accepted a
1999 amnesty offer. President Abdelaziz Bouteflika recently hinted he
would offer another amnesty for rebels wishing to surrender.
The GIA was responsible for the hijacking of an Air France plane at
Algiers airport in December 1994. French troops stormed the aircraft
in Marseille, southern France, killing the four rebels and freeing the
hostages.








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