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'Benghazi attack suspect' dies in Cairo shootout

Sashan

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A man suspected of involvement in an attack on the US consulate in the Libyan city of Benghazi last month has been killed in the Egyptian capital, Cairo, officials say.
The man was killed after an exchange of fire with security services in the Cairo suburb of Madinet Nasr.

Authorities named the man only as Hazem.

Four US diplomatic officials were killed in the Benghazi attack, among them the US ambassador to Libya.

According to the Egyptian officials the suspect was cornered in a flat in Madinet Nasr early on Wednesday morning. He threw a bomb at the security forces, but it bounced back into the flat.

An exchange of fire with the security services then began and went on for several hours, local media reports say.

The suspect's burnt body was found in the property, along with weapons and explosive materials, officials say.

The area was sealed off by police while emergency services dealt with a blaze caused by the exchange of fire.

Emergency services also had to rescue other residents of the building using hydraulic ladders, officials told the al-Ahram newspaper.

One possibility is that the suspect was trying to make his way to the Sinai peninsula, which has become a magnet for militants from across the region, the BBC's Jon Leyne in Cairo reports.

BBC News - 'Benghazi attack suspect' dies in Cairo shootout


Looks like Pres. Obama is keeping his promise in going after the perps.
 
Could this is a muslim brotherhood terrorist who infiltrated into Libya taking advantage of the Chaos?
 
If so, why would the Egyptian security forces kill him?

Directly? Because he tried to throw explosives at them engaged them in a shootout.

Interest wise (for capturing him)? Because he's potentially responsible for the death of a US ambassador.
 
Directly? Because he tried to throw explosives at them engaged them in a shootout.

Interest wise (for capturing him)? Because he's potentially responsible for the death of a US ambassador.

I didn't get you on the highlighted point.
 
I didn't get you on the highlighted point.

deliberately killing diplomats of other nations is a big no no as well as potentially an act of war if the assassin is state sponsored. This belief is essentially the foundation on which global diplomacy is wrought, and the Egyptian government is not going to put its *** to the fire for some possibly foreign nobody who did so, and most somebodies for that matter when it comes to the US.
 
Seems like he was silenced so that his bosses won't be revealed.
 
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