LONDON (AP) — Britain, Germany and the Netherlands urged their citizens to immediately leave the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi on Thursday, warning of an imminent threat against Westerners days after a deadly hostage crisis in neighboring Algeria.
European officials told The Associated Press that schools were among the potential targets.
The warnings came a day after U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton testified to Congress about the Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi that killed four Americans, including the U.S.
ambassador to Libya. They also came as French troops battled
al-Qaida-linked militants in the West African nation of Mali, and
followed the deaths of at least 37 foreign hostages seized by Islamist extremists in Algeria.
It was unclear if those two events were linked to the latest concerns about Libya.
The foreign ministries of the three European countries issued statements describing the threat as specific and imminent but none would elaborate.
The U.S. Embassy in Tripoli, Libya's capital far to the west of Benghazi, said there was "no specific information pointing to specific, imminent threats against U.S. citizens."
With a population of 1 million, Benghazi is Libya's second-largest city and where the Libyan uprising against longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi began in February 2011. Gadhafi
was eventually toppled and killed after NATO backed the rebel movement,
and the Arab country has since struggled with increasing insecurity.
Al-Qaida-linked militants operate in Libya alongside other Islamist groups, and the country is awash in weapons looted from Gadhafi's many military depots.
Schools, businesses and offices of non-governmental organizations
were among the possible targets, according to two European officials
familiar with the threats. They spoke to the AP on condition of
anonymity because they were not authorized to be quoted by name in the
media. They refused to give any other details.
Violence in Benghazi has targeted both foreigners as well as Libyan officials in recent months, with assassinations, bombings and other attacks.
It was not immediately clear how
many people were affected by the European warnings. Britain's Foreign
Office said "dozens" of its citizens were in the city, while Dutch
spokesman Thijs van Son said four Dutch citizens were registered there,
and possibly two more were in the city. A German Foreign Ministry
official, who requested anonymity because government policy did not
allow him to be quoted by name, said "very few" Germans were in Benghazi.
Several countries have for months advised against all travel to the city, especially after the U.S. mission was attacked. Residents say many foreigners had already left in recent weeks.
Air Malta canceled Thursday's flights between the Mediterranean island and Benghazi following the British advice, but said flights to Tripoli were not affected. The airline said its next flight to Benghazi was scheduled for Tuesday, adding that it will keep reviewing the situation.
Adel Mansouri,
principal of the International School of Benghazi, said U.K. and
foreign citizens were warned in the last few days about a possible
threat to Westerners. He said the school's teachers were given the
option of leaving but decided to stay.
The school has some 540 students. Most are Libyan, with some 40
percent holding dual nationality. Less than 5 percent are British, while
10 to 15 students have U.S.-Libyan nationality, he said. Classes were
not due to resume until Sunday because of a holiday Thursday.
"We told the British ambassador we are staying, and we'll be in
touch," said Mansouri, who has both Libyan and British citizenship. "We
don't see a threat on the ground."
Saleh Gawdat, a Benghazi
lawmaker, said French doctors working in the city's hospitals have left
and the French cultural center was closed over concerns about potential
retaliation for the French-led military intervention against Islamist militants in Mali, which began two weeks ago.
In addition to the deadly Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. mission, an Italian diplomat's car was fired on by militants in Benghazi
earlier this month. The consul, Guido De Sanctis, wasn't injured but
the attack prompted Italy to suspend its consular activities and send
its foreign staff home.
Islamist extremists in the area are often blamed for targeting security officials who once worked under Gadhafi, taking revenge for those who tortured or imprisoned them in the past. Many residents also accuse Gadhafi loyalists of trying to undermine Libya's new leaders by sowing violence.
Fawzi Wanis, head of the Supreme Security Committee in Benghazi, said he did not know of an imminent threat, but "in general it is possible that something happens" in connection to Mali.
Ibrahim Sahd, a Benghazi-based
lawmaker and politician, said the new government is putting together a
plan to beef up security in the city and this "might have caused the
Westerners to worry about a backlash."
Noman Benotman, a former Libyan
jihadist with links to al-Qaida who is now an analyst at London's
Quilliam Foundation, said other groups inspired by the terror network
have been gaining a following in Libya since Gadhafi's fall. There have been nearly a dozen attacks against Western targets in Libya recently, he said.
"It's the same al-Qaida ideology that is driving these militants," Benotman said.
Oil companies working in other parts of Libya said they were aware of the European warnings to foreign citizens in Benghazi but said there were no immediate plans for evacuations.
____
Associated Press writers Mike
Corder in The Hague, Netherlands, Juergen Baetz in Berlin, Maggie
Michael in Cairo, Gregory Katz in London, Nicole Winfield in Rome, and
Matthew Lee in Washington contributed to this report.
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