Britain may launch an Osama bin Laden like ‘kill or snatch’ operation in the Sahara desert to nail the one-eyed al-Qaeda kingpin Mokhtar Belmokhtar, believed to be responsible for a hostage standoff in Algeria.
A crack British team of ‘specialists’ has arrived in Algeria to hunt down the terror chief behind the hostage carnage and Prime Minister David Cameron has said SAS units are on standby.
Cameron told Parliament that the SAS was on standby to rescue survivors, but the Algerian Government had so far rejected five offers for launching an all-out operation to nail the desert terror mastermind.
Belmokhtar, according to intelligence reports, has a 32 strong heavily armed group with him.
The Prime Minister said Britain would help lead a robust security response to the crisis and “will do everything we can to hunt down the people responsible.”
The clamour for the head of Belmokhtar rose as reports said 10 British hostages were still missing at the remote gas complex in the Sahara.
The British team would be based in its embassy complex in Algiers. Other hostage nations including Norway, whose citizens are also in danger, have also pledged to send their own special forces to the besieged gas plant with or without Algerian permission, the paper said.
Quoting British intelligence reports, The Sun said it was feared that Belmokhtar’s men were holding British and American captives separately from other hostages apparently to seek to swap them in exchange for Egyptian blind cleric Sheikh Omar Abdel-Rahman and Pakistani Aafia Siddiqui, both being held in jail in the US on terrorism charges.
The UK and US may also raise the bounty on Belmokhtar’s head from the current $100,000 to $1 million. The Desert al-Qaeda chief has been dubbed as the Marlboro Man, because he raises terror funds by smuggling cigarettes.