Thousands of protesters
had taken to the street earlier Friday, loudly declaring that they --
and not those behind last week's deadly attack -- represent the real
sentiments of the Libyan people.
"I am sorry, America," one man said. "This is the real Libya."
In the evening, an
offshoot of several hundred people then headed toward the headquarters
for Ansar al-Sharia, a loosely connected radical Islamist group.
As militia members fled,
the protesters torched a vehicle and took over the group's building
without firing a single shot. Some of those involved claimed to have
freed at least 20 captives held inside, and expressed their intent to
assume control over other Ansar al-Sharia buildings.
Army General Naji
al-Shuaibi said the citizens, whom he referred to as "revolutionaries of
the February 17 uprising," later asked that the Ansar al-Sharia
headquarters be handed over to the Libyan army.
"Indeed, we rushed here
and we will now take it over," said the general. "There are also other
places that we intend to take over (which belong to armed groups) if the
revolutionaries and the people allow us to do so."
But some of the
protesters gathered at locations that house forces loyal to the national
authority, he said, including the headquarters of the Rufallah
al-Sihati battalion. Gunfire could be heard at the headquarters, but it
was not initially clear who was responsible.
Mohamed al-Magariaf,
president of Libya's General National Congress, thanked the protesters
for helping evict "armed groups. He also said the Rufallah al-Sihati
brigade was actually "under the command of -- and committed to -- the
national authority," the case appeared to be one of mistaken identity.
Magariaf asked demonstrators to stop their activities and go home.
There was widespread
speculation that anti-national authority groups capitalized on the
euphoria after the takeover of the Ansar al-Sharia headquarters and
pushed protesters to move toward locations under the control of the army
and the police force.
On the night of
September 11, U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens was one of four
Americans slain after a group assaulted the U.S. Consulate in the
eastern Libyan city.
Seen as the birthplace
of the revolution that led to the death of longtime Libyan leader
Moammar Gadhafi, Benghazi has in recent months been beset by security
issues.
Initial reports
indicated that, ahead of the consular attack, Ansar al-Sharia had
organized a protest to decry an inflammatory film that mocks the Prophet
Mohammed and also protest the United States, where the film was
privately produced.
On Thursday, Libyan
Prime Minister Mustafa Abushagur said eight detained in connection with
that assault include members of Ansar al-Sharia, though he added that
not all the attackers came from one specific group.
Responding to the report
from Benghazi, U.S. Sen. John McCain applauded the citizens' efforts
Friday and said it represented the true, freedom-loving Libya that he
and other U.S. officials involved in the country knew.
"Somewhere Chris Stevens is smiling," the Arizona Republican said. "This is what we knew ... about Libya."
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