The Borneo Post

Libyan jailed 22 years over Benghazi attack

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WASHINGTON: Libyan Ahmed Abu Khattala was sentenced Wednesday in Washington to 22 years in prison for his role in the 2012 Benghazi attack that killed a US ambassador and three others.

Prosecutor­s were unable to convince a jury that Khattala, leader of a militant group who had been photograph­ed watching the attack on Sept 11, 2012, was directly to blame for the deaths of US Ambassador Christophe­r Stevens, a second State Department official, and two CIA contractor guards at the consulate and a CIA annex.

He was convicted of only four of 18 charges he faced: supporting terrorists, conspiracy to provide support to terrorists, carrying a semi-automatic weapon during a violent crime, and damaging US property.

That was far weaker than the picture prosecutor­s had presented of Khattala as the person who plotted and directed the deadly assault.

The death of Stevens stunned Americans and became the focus of a politicall­y charged investigat­ion by congressio­nal Republican­s of then- secretary of state Hillary Clinton, who was accused of not protecting the diplomats.

Khattala was captured in 2014 in a raid by US special forces, who then placed him aboard a navy ship where he was interrogat­ed for a week before being delivered to the United States.

In November 2017, a second Libyan accused of involvemen­t in the Benghazi attack, Mustafa al-Imam, was put on trial in the same Washington court, days after being captured and brought to the United States.

Al-Imam was accused of being one of the men who attacked the consulate. — AFP

 ??  ?? Israeli soldiers drag away an injured Palestinia­n who tried to approach the border fence east of Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip. — AFP photo
Israeli soldiers drag away an injured Palestinia­n who tried to approach the border fence east of Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip. — AFP photo

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