Six Filipinos were among those killed while four others
 were reported missing in the hostage crisis that rocked Algeria last 
week, according to the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA).
"Based
 on reports received from team in Algeria and embassy in London, 16 OFWs
 (overseas Filipino workers) accounted for and confirmed alive, six were
 confirmed dead, four were still unaccounted for," said DFA spokesman 
Raul Hernandez at a press briefing Monday.
He said the 26 Filipinos were working at the gas facility that was attacked by Islamic militants last week.
"The
 DFA is now notifying next of kin of the six confirmed dead and 
coordinating shipment of their remains. We are locating whereabouts of 
the unaccounted four," Hernandez said.
He said all the 
Filipino fatalities, who were killed "mostly by gunshot wounds and the 
effects of explosion" were male and were "mostly from Japanese 
companies."
It was not clear, however, if the six 
Filipinos were executed by the militants or were killed when Algerian 
authorities staged an assault on the facility to end the hostage crisis.
16 accounted for
Hernandez
 said of the 16 OFWs who were accounted for, four were in Al-Azhar 
clinic in Algiers, four were billeted in Mercure Hotel awaiting 
repatriation, four were repatriated and were on their way home, and four
 were vacationing in the Philippines when the hostage-taking incident 
happened.
On Sunday, dozens of Filipinos arrived home after being sent home by their employer in Algeria due to security fears following an Islamic militant attack at a remote gas plant.
A
 Reuters report Monday morning said Algerian troops found 25 bodies of 
hostages at the bomb-littered gas plant deep in the Sahara desert on 
Sunday, a day after ending the four-day siege. This raised the death toll of militants and their captives to at least 80.
Around
 30 foreigners — including American, British, French, Japanese, 
Norwegian and Romanian citizens — are among those missing or confirmed 
dead after the siege, one of the worst international hostage crises in 
decades.
Algeria had given a preliminary death toll of
 55 people killed — 23 hostages and 32 militants — on Saturday and said 
it would rise as more bodies were found.
Deployment ban?
Despite the incident, the Philippine government has yet to discuss whether a deployment ban will be implemented in Algeria.
"There
 are no discussions on that yet," Hernandez said. "As you all know 
deployment bans are decided upon by the POEA (Philippine Overseas 
Employment Administration) governing board upon the recommendation of 
the DFA and our people on the ground." — KBK, GMA News
source: gmanetwork.com 
