The first appearance of the Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa was on 22 October 2011, when the group kidnapped three
western aid workers from the
Sahrawi refugee camps in
Tindouf, Algeria. The
Polisario Front, which administers the refugee camps, initially blamed AQIM. MOJWA released in December a video of the abducted Italian and Spanish women as well as a Spanish man, demanding 30 million euros for their release. The three hostages were freed in July 2012 in exchange for $18 million and the release of three Islamists. On 3 March 2012, MOJWA claimed responsibility for a suicide
car bombing at a paramilitary police base in
Tamanrasset that resulted in injuries to 10 soldiers and one civilian, some of whom were in serious condition. After warning that it would attack French targets for their role in attacking northern Mali, MOJWA were suspected of carrying out two car bombings in Niger on 23 May 2013. In March 2014, Malian military sources reported that Omar Ould Hamaha and
Abu Walid Sahraoui had been killed by a French air strike in the northeast. Reports of Sahraoui's death were later proven false. The Niger government accused MOJWA of the kidnapping of American aid worker Jeffery Woodke on 12 Oct 2016. Gunmen killed the two security guards at Woodke's house, captured Woodke and reportedly took him across the Mali border towards Menaka.
Capture and seizure of Gao During the
2012 Tuareg rebellion in late March, MOJWA took part in the capture of
Gao, along with
Ansar Dine. On 9 April, MOJWA claimed the kidnapping of seven Algerians from the consulate in Gao, including the
consul and
vice-consul. The kidnapping of the consul was filmed in progress by Aljazeera. Three days later, it issued a statement that read the hostages were being treated well "according to
Sharia law" and they asked for the liberation of imprisoned members of MOJWA in Algeria in exchange for the consular staff, according to sources mentioned by the Algerian newspaper
Echorouk. Three of the diplomats were freed in July 2012. After Algeria arrested three
Islamists leaders, MOJWA threatened to execute the hostages unless Algeria released
Necib Tayeb, also known as Abderrahmane Abou Ishak Essoufi, a senior member of AQIM. The vice-counsul, Tahar Touati was executed on 1 September, according to ''Agence Nouakchott d'information''. Walid Abu Sarhaoui, the president of MOJWA's governing council, said: "We have carried out our threat. The hostage has been killed. Algeria had the time to move negotiations along but did not want to. We executed the hostage on Saturday." Algeria's Foreign Ministry released a statement that read: "The statement announcing the execution of the Algerian vice-consular official can only fuel surprise and justify the steps taken to try to confirm the accuracy of the information sent out on late Saturday." At the same time, Algeria's policy of not negotiating or releasing convicted terrorists from prisons was seen by
El Watan as an hindrance to the release of the other hostages. Another diplomat, Boualem Sayes, later died in captivity from a chronic illness. The surviving diplomats were released on 31 August 2014. On 27 June 2012, MOJWA fighters clashed with the forces of the
National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad. MOJWA took control of the governor's palace and MNLA Secretary General
Bilal Ag Acherif's residence, as well as taking 40 MNLA soldiers prisoner. Ag Acherif was wounded in the fighting and was evacuated to Burkina Faso for medical treatment. MOJWA's fighters patrolled the city's streets through the night and arrested at least three people carrying guns. On 1 September 2012, MOJWA took over the northern town of
Douentza, which had previously been held by a
Songhai secular militia, the
Ganda Iso (
Songhai for "Sons of the Land"). Omar Ould Hamaha said that the group had an agreement with the Ganda Iso to govern the town, but had then decided to take it over when the militia appeared to be acting independently. After MOJWA's troops surrounded the town, the militia reportedly surrendered without a fight and were then disarmed. The United States listed it a terror group on 7 December 2012 and the United Nations two days earlier. On 2 June 2014 the government of Canada listed it as a terrorist group. ==Notes==