Libyans tried to rescue Ambassador Chris Stevens, cheering "God is great" and rushing him to a hospital after they discovered him still clinging to life inside the U.S. Consulate, according to witnesses and a new video that emerged Monday from last week's attack in the city of Benghazi.
The group of Libyans had stumbled
across Stevens' seemingly lifeless form inside a dark room and didn't
know who he was, only that he was a foreigner, the man who shot the
video and two other witnesses told The Associated Press.
The account underlines the
confusion that reigned during the assault by protesters and heavily
armed gunmen that overwhelmed the consulate in Benghazi last Tuesday
night, killing four Americans, including Stevens, who died from smoke
inhalation soon after he was found. U.S. officials are still trying to
piece together how the top American diplomat in Libya got separated from
others as staffers were evacuated, suffocating in what is believed to
be a consulate safe-room.
The Libyans who found him expressed frustration that there was no
ambulance and no first aid on hand, leaving him to be slung over a man's
shoulder to be carried to a car.
"There was not a single ambulance
to carry him. Maybe he was handled the wrong way," said Fahd
al-Bakoush, a freelance videographer who shot the footage. "They took
him to a private car."
U.S. and Libyan officials are
also trying to determine who was behind the attack. Still unclear was
whether it had been planned beforehand or was sparked by an anti-Islam
film made in the United States that, hours before the Benghazi assault,
had sparked protests at the American Embassy in Cairo.
On Sunday, Libyan President Mohammed el-Megarif contended foreign
militants had been plotting the attack for months and timed it for
Tuesday's 9/11 anniversary.However, U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Susan Rice said it appeared spontaneous and unplanned, that extremists with heavier weapons "hijacked" the protest and turned it into an outright attack. She noted Libya is awash with weapons.
A CIA memo sent to U.S. lawmakers
this weekend, and obtained by The Associated Press, says current
intelligence still suggests the demonstrations in Benghazi "were
spontaneously inspired by the protests at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo" and
"evolved into a direct assault" on the diplomatic posts by
"extremists."
Soon after the attack, Libyan civilians roamed freely around the
trashed consulate, its walls blacked and furniture burned. Among them
were the videographer al-Bakoush, and a photographer and art student he
often works with.They heard a panicked shout, "I stepped over a dead man," and rushed to see what was going on, al-Bakoush said. The body had been found inside a dark room with a locked door accessible only by a window. A group of men pulled him out and realized he was a foreigner and still alive.
He was breathing and his eyelids
flickered, al-Bakoush said. "He was alive," he said. "No doubt. His face
was blackened and he was like a paralyzed person."
Video taken by al-Bakoush and posted on YouTube shows Stevens being
carried out of the room through a window with a raised shutter. "Bring
him out, man," someone shouts. "Out of the way, out of the way!""Alive, Alive!" come other shouts, then a cheer of "God is great."
The next scene shows Stevens
lying on a tile floor, with one man touching his neck to check his
pulse. Al-Bakoush said that after that scene, they put Stevens in a
private car to rush to the hospital.
The video has been authenticated since Stevens' face is clearly
visible and he is wearing the same white t-shirt seen in authenticated
photos of him being carried away on another man's shoulders, presumably
moments later. The photographer and student who were with al-Bakoush at
the scene gave the same account as he did."We were happy to see him alive. The youths tried to rescue him. But there was no security, no ambulances, nothing to help," said Ahmed Shams, the 22-year-old arts student.
When they entered the consulate, "there was no one around. There was no fire fighters, no ambulances, no relief," said the photographer, Abdel-Qader Fadl.
The accounts of all three witnesses mesh with that of the doctor who treated Stevens that night.
Dr. Ziad Abu Zeid told The
Associated Press last week that Stevens was nearly lifeless when he was
brought by Libyans, with no other Americans around, to the Benghazi
hospital where he worked. He said Stevens had severe asphyxia from the
smoke and that he tried for 90 minutes to resuscitate him with no
success. Only later did security officials confirm it was Stevens.
Fadl said he drove to the hospital behind the car carrying Stevens.
During the assault, more than 30
U.S. staffers were evacuated from the consulate. So far, U.S. officials
have not announced the results of an investigation into the
circumstances of the four Americans' deaths.
They have said preliminary
reports said that amid the evacuation, Stevens and foreign service
officer Sean Smith were inside the consulate with a regional security
officer. They got separated in the smoke. The security officer and
others went back in to try to find the two of them and found Smith dead.
They pulled him out but flames and gunfire forced them to flee before
they could find Stevens.
Al-Bakoush and his colleagues said that once they learned his identity, they were stunned Stevens had been alone.
"I've never seen incompetence and
negligence like this, from the two sides, the Americans and the
Libyans," he said. "You can sacrifice everyone but rescue the
ambassador. He is the ambassador for God's sake."
source: yahoo news
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