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Armed Islamic GroupBritannica Student Article

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(GIA), fundamentalist Islamic guerrilla and terrorist group in Algeria. An estimated 60,000 people died by violence in Algeria between 1992 and 1997. The victims included judges, journalists, intellectuals, security guards, other Islamic militants, foreigners, and thousands of Algerian villagers. In the succession of attacks and reprisals by the rebel Armed Islamic Group and the government, it was often hard to tell who was doing the killing. A splintered movement without united leadership, the GIA was estimated to have between several hundred and several thousand members.

The group was formed in 1992 after the Algerian government, under secular military leadership, nullified elections, which had been won by the fundamentalist Islamic Salvation Front (FIS), and outlawed the FIS. Although the government claimed the FIS supported the GIA, some FIS leaders—in prison or in exile—denounced violence against civilians, and the GIA threatened to kill FIS members who pursued a political solution to the unrest in the country.

The core of the GIA was a group of young men known as Afghanis because many of them had helped the mujahideen (Afghani Islamic fundamentalists) fight the Soviets in Afghanistan in the 1980s. GIA membership was also said to include common criminals, desperate youths, individuals settling private or family vendettas, and police informers.

Most of the people killed in 1992 were security personnel on one side and militants on the other. The violence escalated in 1993 to include the abduction and murder of civilians by both government security forces and the GIA. Hoping to isolate the military dictatorship and bring oil production to a standstill, the GIA warned all foreigners in September 1993 to leave Algeria or be killed. That December, 14 Christian Bosnian and Croatian power-company employees became the first of more than 100 foreigners to die in GIA attacks.

The GIA considered France a major prop of the Algerian regime. On Dec. 24, 1994, GIA members hijacked a French airbus with the intention of blowing it up over Paris. They killed three passengers before paratroopers ambushed and killed the hijackers at Marseilles. More than ten people died the next summer in GIA attacks in France, including bombings in the Paris Metro and an attempted bombing of the French high-speed train, the TGV.

In Algeria, meanwhile, violence by both sides continued to increase. The GIA threatened to kill voters in the presidential election of November 1995, but the threat did not keep Algerians from going to the polls and reelecting the incumbent president.

In 1996 the government gave many villagers weapons to form self-defense groups. The result was to pull civilians more deeply into the conflict. At least 1,500 civilians were massacred in August, September, and October 1997, many of them in towns and villages just south of Algiers. Although the government blamed the GIA, soldiers in nearby barracks did nothing to stop the killings.