Sofiane el-Fassila (Arabic: سفيان الفصيلة), also known as Harek Zoheir حارك زهير, (born 1975 – 6 October 2007) served as the second-in-command of Al Qaeda in North Africa until Algerian security forces killed him.[1][2]

Sofiane el-Fassila
Born1975
Died6 October 2007
Other namesSofiane Fassila, Abu Haidara, Harek Zoheir
Known forTerrorism
Military career
Allegiance Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (1994–2006)
Al-Qaeda
(2006-2007)
Years of service1994–2007
RankEmir of central Maghreb for Al-Qaeda and deputy of Abdelmalek Droukdel
Battles/warsAlgerian Civil War

Insurgency in the Maghreb

Life and militant activity edit

Sofiane born in 1975 in Sidi Daoud in the region of Dellys, and he became a militant in the Algerian jihadist group Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat in 1994.[3] In 2006, he was appointed by Abdelmalek Droukdel as the head of central zone of AQIM's operating space. The following year, following the Droukdel's oath of allegiance to al-Qaeda dubbing of Droukdel to the rank of "emir" of al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, Sofiane became one of his closest commanders. Involved in numerous terrorist attacks, Sofiane was known to be the head of a network specialized in arms trafficking, a cell of which was dismantled in Berriane in 2006.[4] Sofiane was presented as the brain of the attacks of 11 April 2007 in Algiers, perpetrated against the Government Palace in the heart of the capital. However, some sources agree that the real coordinator of the attacks was Sid Ali Rachid, also known as Ali Dix, presented as the "military advisor" of Droukdel.[5] In June 2007, the Court of Boumerdès sentenced him in absentia to 20 years imprisonment and then to life imprisonment for several cases of terrorism. Harek Zoheir died on 6 October 2007, killed in a counter-terrorism operation by the Algerian security forces in the Boghni region of Kabylia. Two other fighters are also killed during the operation.[6][7]

References edit

  1. ^ A Top Algeria Al-Qaida Affiliate Killed Daily Comet
  2. ^ Reports: Top al-Qaida in Islamic North Africa leader killed by Algerian security forces PR-Inside
  3. ^ "L'"émir" de la zone 2 Sofiane El-Fassila serait derrière l'attentat".
  4. ^ "Algerie Actualiés, informations, photos, annonces Algérie".
  5. ^ "Algerie Actualiés, informations, photos, annonces Algérie".
  6. ^ "E-Quoter: Oil, Islam & War on Terror: The Algeria Criteria".
  7. ^ http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/world/2007-10-10-1217438287_x.htm

External links edit