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Algerian Gendarmes escort a freed Norwegian hostage Oddvar Birkedal at a police station in Amenas on Jan. 19, 2013. The Algerian army on Saturday carried out a final assault on al-Qaeda-linked gunmen holed up in a desert gas plant, killing 11 of the Islamists after they took the lives of seven more foreign hostages, a local source and the state news agency said.LOUAFI LARBI/Reuters

The apparent leader of a commando group that took hundreds of gas workers hostage in Algeria warned in a recording broadcast Saturday that he would blow them up if the army got too close.

In the audio recording, broadcast by the Mauritanian news agency ANI, Al-Mulathameen Brigade commander Abdul Rahman al-Nigeri of Niger spoke late Thursday as the Algerian military surrounded his fighters' position at a BP oil plant deep in the Sahara desert at In Amenas.

At the time, Algerian soldiers had already mounted an assault that had killed a number of kidnappers and hostages. Mr. Nigeri said that half of the fighters and 35 hostages were killed, while the Algerian authorities had cut off ground communications.

"Some of the hostages are still alive and they are being held by some of the brothers in the gas factory. Praise be to Allah. Praise be to Allah," he said in the recording, according to a translation by the U.S.-based SITE Monitoring Service.

"By Allah, we will blow them up if the Algerian army gets close to us."

Nigeri said Algerian forces had cut off the militants' communications network, including satellite phones.

Algerian troops stormed the plant earlier Saturday to end the hostage crisis that left 23 foreigners and Algerians dead, seven of them executed by their captors in a final military assault.

Twenty-one hostages died during the siege that began when the Al-Qaeda-linked gunmen attacked the In Amenas facility deep in the Sahara desert at dawn on Wednesday, the interior ministry said.

The kidnappers killed two people on a bus, a Briton and an Algerian, before taking hundreds of workers hostage when they overran the gas plant.

Thirty-two kidnappers were also killed, and special forces were able to free 685 Algerian workers and 107 foreigners, according to the interior ministry.

Among the dead were an unknown number of foreigners – including from Britain, France, Romania and the United States – and many were still unaccounted for, including Japanese.

In his first direct comments about the crisis, U.S. President Barack Obama said that blame for deaths stemming from a hostage crisis in Algeria lay with the "terrorists" who had taken captives at the plant.

Mr. Nigeri was said to be a senior lieutenant to the overall leader of the kidnappers, Algerian Mokhtar Belmokhtar, a former Al-Qaeda commander in North Africa.

Mr. Belmokhtar's "Signatories in Blood" group had been demanding an end to French military intervention against militants in neighboring Mali.

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