French hostage Herve Gourdel beheaded by militants in Algeria

September 25, 2014 07:52 am | Updated November 17, 2021 04:08 am IST - Paris

A portrait of mountain guide of Frenchman Herve Gourdel hangs near a French flag outside the town hall in Saint-Martin-Vesubie, September 24, 2014. Algerian militants have released a video that appears to show them beheading Gourdel who was kidnapped on Sunday in what the group said was a response to France's action against Islamic State militants in Iraq.   REUTERS/Patrice Massante  (FRANCE - Tags: POLITICS CONFLICT TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)

A portrait of mountain guide of Frenchman Herve Gourdel hangs near a French flag outside the town hall in Saint-Martin-Vesubie, September 24, 2014. Algerian militants have released a video that appears to show them beheading Gourdel who was kidnapped on Sunday in what the group said was a response to France's action against Islamic State militants in Iraq. REUTERS/Patrice Massante (FRANCE - Tags: POLITICS CONFLICT TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)

French President Francois Hollande confirmed on Wednesday the death of a French man abducted in Algeria by a group linked to Islamic State (IS) Sunni radical militants.

At an U.N. General Assembly meeting in New York, Mr. Hollande affirmed that Herve Gourdel, 55, seized by the Jund al-Khilafah group, was “cowardly and cruelly murdered”, Xinhua reported.

“This assassination will reinforce our determination to continue fighting terrorism everywhere. We will continue the combat against IS. Military airstrikes will therefore continue,” Mr. Hollande stressed.

The French President said he will head a defence meeting at the Elysee on Thursday to discuss Paris’s military operation in Iraq and ways to ensure expatriates and citizens safety.

The Frenchman, Herve Gourdel, a mountaineering guide from Nice, was abducted in Algeria on Sunday by a terrorist group, known as Jund al-Khilafah. He had arrived only a day before on a trip to go hiking in Algeria’s northern mountains.

In a video footage, the IS urged followers to attack westerners whose nations have joined a coalition to fight the jihadi group after France launched, last Friday, its first air raids destroying IS targets.

France raised the threat level to 30 of its embassies across the Middle East and Africa, urging its expatriates to show high vigilance and to closely follow the ministry’s security recommendations.

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