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21 Missing Tourists Sought in Sahara
Associated Press ^ | 4/4/03 | HASSANE MEFTAHI

Posted on 04/05/2003 6:22:00 PM PST by Oorang

21 Missing Tourists Sought in Sahara HASSANE MEFTAHI Associated Press

ALGIERS, Algeria - Searchers using camels and helicopters equipped with heat-seeking sensors have scoured the Sahara Desert for 21 tourists, mostly Germans, who vanished in Algeria over the past six weeks.

But the search effort has, so far, been in vain, and authorities cannot even say whether smugglers, Islamic insurgents or potentially devastating desert problems like empty gas tanks are to blame.

Five groups of tourists - 16 Germans, four Swiss and a Dutch national - have disappeared in Algeria since the end of February.

Most went missing near desert towns such as Illizi, near the Libyan frontier, and Tamanrasset, the main town in southern Algeria, some 1,240 miles from the capital.

"Authorities and the population are searching river beds, canyons and dunes, in vehicles and on the backs of camels" to try to find the tourists, said a statement issued Thursday by an association of travel agencies, known as UNATA.

Officials have also used helicopters equipped with heat-seeking sensors that could probe any sign of life beneath the sand, newspapers here have reported. The German Foreign Ministry on Thursday confirmed the use of special equipment.

The first disappearances occurred Feb. 21, when 11 tourists - six Germans, four Swiss and a Dutch national - went missing somewhere between Ouargla and Djanet, in the middle of the desert, according to the official APS news agency. It reported the disappearances only on March 17.

The latest group, two men and two women aged 45-64 from the southern German city of Augsburg, left for Algeria Feb. 22. They were last heard from in the center of the country on March 8, Augsburg police said. One of the women had been expected to return at the end of March.

Smugglers and drug traffickers are known to haunt the area around southern Algeria, near the borders with Niger and Libya. The German Foreign Ministry warned Tuesday that criminal groups and smugglers operating in that area pose a risk and advised travelers to put off trips to the region.

Islamic extremists waging an insurgency in Algeria for more than a decade have not carried out attacks in the vast desert region. Still, there has been speculation that insurgents may be behind the disappearances.

The press, which has paid only slight attention to the disappearances, suggested at one point that Mokhtar Belmokhtar, linked to the Salafast Group for Call and Combat, one of two main insurgency movements in Algeria, could be behind the disappearances. It linked the mysterious Belmokhtar to smugglers. European anti-terrorism officials have tied the Salafist Group of Call and Combat to al-Qaida, the network of Osama bin Laden.

However, the group, led by Hassan Hattab, has traditionally targeted police officers, soldiers and other symbols of power, avoiding indiscriminate attacks on civilians.

The Germany Foreign Ministry spokesman, speaking on condition of anonymity, declined to comment on speculation that the Salafist Group for Call and Combat might have seized the tourists.

But, he added, "We can't exclude anything."

UNATA, the travel agency association, expressed concern at the numbers of tourists who venture into the Sahara Desert without a properly planned trip or a guide.

"It is imperative to distinguish between real Sahara tourism and impromptu and clandestine expeditions," the travel association said.

Tourists have been found dead in the desert in the past, stranded because they ran out of gas.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: algeria; germans; missing; saharadesert; tourists
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Time to re-think that Algerian vacation.
1 posted on 04/05/2003 6:22:00 PM PST by Oorang
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To: Oorang
Why on earth would these people go to a hell-hole like Algeria when they could easily drive to the Riviera?
2 posted on 04/05/2003 6:24:04 PM PST by Gritty
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To: Oorang
Erwin Rommel fan club?
3 posted on 04/05/2003 6:25:50 PM PST by Ben Hecks (Fry Mumia.....then fry Ramsey Clark)
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To: Oorang
using camels and helicopters equipped with heat-seeking sensors

Heat seeking camels...works for me.

4 posted on 04/05/2003 6:31:05 PM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: Gritty
Why on earth would these people go to a hell-hole like Algeria when they could easily drive to the Riviera?

Maybe they were making their way to Nigeria to collect their share of the $25 million in secret funds they were offered via an e-mail message.

5 posted on 04/05/2003 6:48:41 PM PST by Larry Lucido
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To: Larry Lucido
Is that Nigerian scam still going around?
6 posted on 04/05/2003 6:56:29 PM PST by Oorang
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To: Larry Lucido
Maybe they were making their way to Nigeria to collect their share of the $25 million in secret funds they were offered via an e-mail message.

Them, too? Maybe I'll change my travel and get-rich plans now.

7 posted on 04/05/2003 6:57:31 PM PST by Pearls Before Swine
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To: Oorang
Heat-seeking sensors in the Sahara desert, huh? They probably ought to break out the sand-seeking sensors, too.
8 posted on 04/05/2003 6:57:49 PM PST by watchin
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To: Oorang
Searchers using camels and helicopters equipped with heat-seeking sensors have scoured the Sahara Desert for 21 tourists, mostly Germans, who vanished in Algeria over the past six weeks.

I'm sure the crack German military will be down there immediately to locate and rescue these poor people.

As soon as they can find an American company to rent a plane from.

9 posted on 04/05/2003 7:00:44 PM PST by Timesink (When was the last time YOU remembered we're on Code Orange?)
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To: Oorang
21 Missing Tourists Sought in Sahara

The Sahara is just across the street from the Las Vegas Hilton. How could they get lost?

10 posted on 04/05/2003 7:04:18 PM PST by pbear8 ( sed libera nos a malo)
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To: Oorang
Must be the long lost but not forgotten 'Saraha Triangle'...
11 posted on 04/05/2003 7:05:17 PM PST by CommandoFrank (Peer into the depths of hell and there is the face of Islam!)
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To: pbear8
The Sahara is just across the street from the Las Vegas Hilton. How could they get lost?

It was the Mirage. They must have gotten lost.

12 posted on 04/05/2003 7:18:19 PM PST by Oorang
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To: Oorang
It was the Mirage. They must have gotten lost.

Hope they find the Aladdin.

13 posted on 04/05/2003 7:22:48 PM PST by pbear8 ( sed libera nos a malo)
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To: Oorang
Yes the scam is still around, I was offered a once-in-a-lifetime offer just last month. I was unable to go because I had plans to clean out my sock drawer & just couldn't change the date.
14 posted on 04/05/2003 7:53:36 PM PST by Ditter
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To: pbear8
They took that stupid little trolley bus that does a tour of the Strip.
15 posted on 04/05/2003 7:54:55 PM PST by Rollee
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To: Oorang
Beware wirlpools ahead!
16 posted on 04/05/2003 8:17:22 PM PST by Atchafalaya
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To: Gritty
Well, the German gov't has its own little problems. We have a war of liberation to run.
17 posted on 04/05/2003 8:25:20 PM PST by virgil
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To: Oorang
I was convinced that Algeria is a country to avoid -- a very dangerous, bad place. So I didn’t go there. And I think I was wise not to. The next time someone says: “There’s nowhere in the world tourists haven’t gone, there are tourists everywhere,” ask that person what’s the last time someone he or she knew went to Algeria. No one goes there. It is the most dangerous country in the world.

-- Paul Theroux.


18 posted on 04/05/2003 8:31:38 PM PST by dighton (Amen-Corner Hatchet Team, Nasty Little Clique, Vulgar Horde)
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To: Rollee
They should have rented the stretch Hummer.
19 posted on 04/05/2003 8:32:14 PM PST by pbear8 ( sed libera nos a malo)
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To: Oorang
My husband's cousin was working there, he had to work under armed guard for safety. He quit after 9/ll.
20 posted on 04/05/2003 8:32:36 PM PST by imsosickofrcbashers
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