Algerian troops found the body of French tourist Herve Gourdel, security sources said Thursday, months after he was beheaded by jihadists demanding that France halt air strikes against the Islamic State group.
The body was found buried without its head in Akbil, where Gourdel was abducted by the Jund al-Khilafa (Soldiers of the Caliphate) group, the sources said.
The army had mobilized 3,000 troops to find the 55-year-old mountain guide's body and launched a new search operation on Wednesday.
Excavations were carried out in Akbil and in the neighboring town of Abu Youssef following a tip-off by an Islamist detainee, a security source told AFP.
The search was headed by an elite army unit and aided by sniffer dogs.
Police experts arrived at the burial site to conduct genetic tests to formally identify the body and Algeria's senior terrorism prosecutor, as well as the judge presiding over Gourdel's case, were also at the scene.
The military had been forced to bring in munitions experts as the area around the grave had been rigged with explosives, the source said.
Gourdel was abducted by Jund al-Khilafa on September 21, while hiking in a national park that was once a draw for tourists but became a sanctuary for Islamists.
He was beheaded days later in a video posted online after France rejected the jihadists' demand to halt air strikes against the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria.
Jund al-Khilafa had earlier pledged allegiance to IS.
In December, the army said it had killed the leader of the militants who beheaded Gourdel.
The body of Abdelmalek Gouri, who claimed responsibility for the Frenchman's killing, was identified after an operation in which two other suspected militants were killed in Isser, about 60 kilometers (40 miles) east of Algiers.
An Algerian court has also launched legal proceedings against 15 people suspected of participating in the beheading.
Gourdel's death followed calls by IS for Muslims to kill Westerners whose nations have joined a campaign to battle the jihadist group in Iraq and Syria.
Violence involving armed Islamists in Algeria has fallen considerably since the civil war of the 1990s, but groups linked to al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb continue to launch attacks in the northeast, mostly on security forces.
Gouri, alias Khaled Abou Souleimane, was the former right-hand man of AQIM leader Abdelmalek Droukdel, and is suspected of helping to organize suicide attacks on the government palace and against a UN contingent in Algiers in 2007.
He is also thought to have masterminded an April attack that killed 11 soldiers in Iboudrarene, the same region where Gourdel was kidnapped.
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