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Bel Mokhtar Image Credit: AFP

Tripoli: A veteran Islamist militant, blamed for masterminding an Algerian gas field attack and running smuggling routes across North Africa, has been killed in a US air strike inside Libya, Libya’s recognised government said on Sunday.

The government said the strike had killed Mokhtar Belmokhtar, an Algerian militant who became a major figure in insurgencies across North Africa and the Sahel and had earned the nickname the “Uncatchable” from the French military.

However an Islamist who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals in restive Libya, told The Associated Press Belmokhtar wasn’t at the site of the US air strike. He said the strike killed four Ansar Shariah members in Ajdabiya, some 850 kilometers east of the Libyan capital, Tripoli. The US military confirmed Belmokhtar had been targeted in the air strike on Saturday night, but did not say if he had been killed.

“I can confirm that the target of last night’s counterterrorism strike in Libya was Mokhtar Belmokhtar,” Pentagon spokesman Colonel Steve Warren said in a statement.

“The strike was carried out by US aircraft,” Warren said. ”We are continuing to assess the results of the operation and will provide more details as appropriate.” The Pentagon had said earlier on Sunday it had carried out a strike against an Al Qaida-affiliated target in Libya, but did not elaborate.

Following the initial US statement, Libya’s recognised government said: “The Libyan government in the east of Libya confirms that US fighter jets conducted air strikes last night in a mission which resulted in the death of the terrorist Belmokhtar.” Belmokhtar has been reported killed several times, including in 2013 when he was believed to have died in fighting in Mali.

He has earned a reputation as one of the most elusive jihadi leaders in the region.

If confirmed, the death of Belmokhtar - who was blamed for orchestrating the 2013 attack on Algeria’s In Amenas gas field in which 40 oil workers died, and for several foreign kidnappings - would be a major strike against Al Qaida-tied groups in the region.

Since the fall of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 and Libya’s slide into chaos and fighting between two rival governments, the North African state has seen the rise of Islamist militant groups, which have taken advantage of the turmoil.

Some are allied with Al Qaida’s leadership, others have local loyalties and some have recently declared allegiance with Daesh, which has been gaining ground.

Libyan officials gave no further details about the area of the strike. But before the US statement, Libyan military sources said an air strike on Saturday in Ajdabiya city near Benghazi had killed seven members of the Ansar al Sharia militant group.

One Ajdabiya resident said people had seen what appeared to be an air strike much more accurate than ones carried out by local forces.