DAKAR, Senegal (AP) A Mauritanian website said it received a video from al-Qaida's North African arm on Monday that appeared to indicate seven foreigners taken hostage in West Africa are alive.
The ANI website, which has previously been used by al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM, said the video was released three years to the day after four of the hostages, all French, were kidnapped from the French-operated Areva uranium mine in the northern Niger town of Arlit. It wasn't clear when the video was made, but ANI said recorded messages it contains from the French captives were made in June.
The other three hostages in the video were kidnapped from the northern Mali town of Timbuktu in November 2011. They are from the Netherlands, South Africa and Sweden.
The video was not released to the public or shown online.
AQIM was one of three Islamic extremist groups that took control of northern Mali following a military coup in March 2012. The groups were driven out following a French-led military intervention beginning in January.