THE United States acknowledged yesterday that an Egyptian citizen was killed when a U.S. Navy-contracted ship fired warning shots at approaching motor boats in the Suez Canal. In the immediate aftermath of the late Monday incident, the U.S. Embassy in Cairo and the U.S. Navy maintained that according to the security team aboard the vessel, the Global Patriot, there were no casualties. But an embassy statement said yesterday it “appears that an Egyptian in the boat was killed by one of the warning shots.” The shots apparently killed Mohammed Fouad, who was buried Tuesday amid expressions of anger against the Egyptian Government and the United States by family members. The Navy has been leery of small boats getting near its warships since al-Qaida suicide attackers rammed an explosives-packed motorboat into the USS Cole off Yemen, killing 17 sailors in 2000. Cmdr. Lydia Robertson, spokeswoman for the Bahrain-based U.S. 5th Fleet, said cargo ships sailing under contract to the Navy follow the same rules of engagement as American warships in dealing with approaching boats. The Global Patriot, a civilian ship under short-term contract to the Navy, was approached by small motor boats that often conduct informal commerce with canal shipping. (SD-Agencies)
|