http://uk.reuters.com/article/2013/03/14/uk-libya-church-idUKBRE92D10S20130314

Unknown assailants set fire to church in Libya's Benghazi

BENGHAZI, Libya | Thu Mar 14, 2013 6:21pm GMT 

(Reuters) - Unknown assailants set fire to an Egyptian Coptic church in the 
eastern Libyan city of Benghazi on Thursday, witnesses said, the second attack 
on the building in weeks.

Residents said the attack appeared to be in reaction to a protest at the Libyan 
embassy in Cairo earlier this week where Egyptian protesters burnt a Libyan 
flag outside the embassy and, according to police at the scene, held aloft a 
cross.

The demonstrators there said they were protesting the death of an Egyptian Copt 
in an explosion in front of a church in Libya a month ago.

The church in downtown Benghazi was heavily damaged and charred inside, 
witnesses said, with bookshelves ransacked. As crowds gathered at the scene, 
the fire was eventually put out.

Officials said they were not aware of any injured as the church was empty when 
the attack happened.

"There were rumours of plans to set fire to the church. We didn't hear anything 
today though, we just saw the smoke billowing," one resident who gave his name 
as Bodelal said.

This was the second attack on the Egyptian Coptic church in Benghazi in weeks. 
Gunmen had previously attacked it, assaulting two priests.

About 250 gathered again in front of the embassy in Cairo on Thursday, clashing 
with Egyptian riot police, a security source said.

"This could be reaction against what happened at the embassy. They burnt the 
Egyptian flag in front the embassy," another Benghazi resident, Abdusalem 
Salem, said.

Libya's small Christian community has expressed fears over Islamist extremism 
as the government struggles to impose its authority over armed groups which 
have refused to lay down their weapons since the 2011 war that ousted Muammar 
Gaddafi.

In December, an explosion at a building belonging to a Coptic church in 
Dafniya, close to the western city of Misrata, killed two Egyptian men and 
wounded two others.

Last month, four foreigners were arrested in Benghazi on suspicion of being 
Christian missionaries and printing books about Christianity.

(Reporting by Ali Shuaib and Firas Busalum; Writing by Marie-Louise Gumuchian)



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