Foreigners were taken hostage by the 
militants at the gas plant
The oil firms running the
 Algerian gas plant attacked by Islamist militants in January relied too
 heavily on the army for protection, an inquiry by one of the companies,
 Norway's Statoil, says.
Almost 800 people were at the In Amenas facility when heavily
 armed militants entered at dawn on 16 January 2013."The Algerian military were not able to detect or prevent the attackers from reaching the site," Statoil said.
In total 40 workers and 39 militants died during the three-day siege.
BBC World Affairs correspondent Richard Galpin says the attack was one of the worst in the history of the oil and gas industry.
Guards not armed The gas facility, in the Sahara desert near the town of In Amenas in eastern Algeria, is a joint venture run by Statoil, the British company BP and the Algerian state energy firm Sonatrach.
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   Heavily armed militants entered the In Amenas gas plant before
 dawn on Wednesday 16 January 2013
  
       Heavily armed militants entered the In Amenas gas plant before
 dawn on Wednesday 16 January 2013
They were armed with rocket-propelled grenades and said they had mined the installation
Algerian troops backed by helicopters surrounded the site
The next day, the Algerian army bombarded the militants as they tried to move hostages in a convoy
On Saturday, Algerian forces launched a raid to retake the facility
In total 40 workers and 39 militants died during the incident
The militants were from the Signed in Blood Battalion, a group linked to al-Qaeda.
Its Algerian leader, Mokhtar Belmokhtar, was a veteran of the war against the Soviets in Afghanistan
  
 
 
In Amenas hostage siege
They were armed with rocket-propelled grenades and said they had mined the installation
Algerian troops backed by helicopters surrounded the site
The next day, the Algerian army bombarded the militants as they tried to move hostages in a convoy
On Saturday, Algerian forces launched a raid to retake the facility
In total 40 workers and 39 militants died during the incident
The militants were from the Signed in Blood Battalion, a group linked to al-Qaeda.
Its Algerian leader, Mokhtar Belmokhtar, was a veteran of the war against the Soviets in Afghanistan
"The terror attack against In 
Amenas was an unprecedented attack. It clearly demonstrates that also 
companies like Statoil today face serious security threats," said Statoil investigation 
leader Torgeir Hagen in a statement.
The militants from the Signed in Blood Battalion were able to
 cross the border from Libya into Algeria and then continue through the 
desert to the gas plant without detection.Within 15 minutes the militants had taken control, taking many of the foreign workers hostage.
The private security guards at the plant were not armed, our correspondent says.
"Security measures at the site were not constructed to withstand or delay an attack of this scale, and relied on military protection working effectively," Statoil said its 78-page report concludes.
"Neither Statoil nor the joint venture could have prevented the attack, but there is reason to question the extent of their reliance on Algerian military protection," it said.
"Neither of them conceived of a scenario where a large force of armed attackers reached the facility."
The siege ended when Algerian forces launched a raid to retake the facility.
Statoil says it has not had its own employees stationed at In Amenas since the attack.
 
 
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