Culled from The Nation.
The
United States Ambassador to Libya, Christopher Stevens, and three other
embassy staff have been killed in a rocket attack on their car, a
Libyan official said.
Reuters
says gunmen had attacked and burnt the U.S consulate in the eastern
city of Benghazi, a centre of last year’s uprising against Muammar
Gaddafi, late on Tuesday evening, killing one consular official.
The
building was evacuated. The Libyan official said Stevens was being
driven from the consulate building to a safer location when gunmen
opened fire.
“The
American ambassador and three staff members were killed when gunmen
fired rockets at them,” the official in Benghazi told Reuters.
There was no immediate comment from the State Department in Washington.
U.S.
ambassadors in such volatile countries are accompanied by tight
security, usually travelling in well-protected convoys. Security
officials will be considering whether the two attacks were coordinated.
Libyan deputy prime minister Mustafa Abu Shagour condemned the killing
of the U.S diplomats as a cowardly act.
The
consular official had died after clashes between Libyan security forces
and Islamist militants around the consulate building. Looters raided
the empty compound and some onlookers took pictures after calm returned.
In
neighbouring Egypt, demonstrators had torn down an American flag and
burnt it during the protest. Some tried to raise a black flag with the
words “There is no God but God, and Mohammad is his messenger”, a
Reuters witness said.
U.S
pastor Terry Jones, who had inflamed anger in the Muslim world in 2010
with plans to burn the Koran, said he had promoted “Innocence of
Muslims,” which U.S media said was produced by an Israeli-American
property developer; but clips of another film called “Mohammad, Prophet
of Muslims,” had been circulating for weeks before the protest.
Libya’s
interim government has struggled to impose its authority on a myriad of
armed groups that have refused to lay down their weapons and often take
the law into their own hands.
It was clearly overwhelmed by Tuesday night’s attack on the consulate that preceded the assault on the ambassador.
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