When embassies become places of terror, not sanctuaries
Embassies, consulates and diplomatic missions worldwide are often considered places of sanctuary, however, not all have been impervious to horrific incidents.
When Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi vanished after entering the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul last week, it prompted Turkish officials and media to claim he may have been killed and even dismembered by a squad of assassins on the premises. The macabre mystery stirred memories of instances when diplomatic missions turned into places of terror.
Brutal killings, suicide bombings, militant raids and hostage crises — embassies and consulates have seen plenty of tragedy and bloodshed.
Here are just some of many examples:
Benghazi, attack on US compounds in Libya
Libyan extremists from the militant Ansar al-Shariah group attacked two US compounds — a diplomatic post and a CIA annexe nearby — in the city of Benghazi on September 11, 2012, setting off a night of rampage that killed four Americans, including Ambassador Chris Stevens, and gutted the buildings.
Last year, a jury in Washington convicted 47-year-old Libyan militant Ahmed Abu Khattala on multiple terrorism-related charges for his role in the attacks.
Australian embassy bombing in Jakarta
Suspected militants detonated a car bomb outside the Australian Embassy in Jakarta, Indonesia, on Sept 9, 2004, killing eight people, including an embassy guard, policemen on duty, two embassy workers and a visa applicant.
Myanmar embassy siege in Bangkok
A shadowy group known as the Vigorous Burmese Student Warriors stormed the Myanmar Embassy in Bangkok on October 7, 1999. They took 38 hostages to demand democracy in their country, also known as Burma. Thailand allowed them to fly to the border, angering Myanmar but ending the standoff without bloodshed.
US bombing of Chinese embassy in Belgrade
Nato bombs hit the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade by mistake on May 8, 1999, killing three Chinese reporters.
In China, protesters retaliated by attacking US missions.
Al Qaeda bombings of US embassies in east Africa
Al Qaeda launched near-simultaneous truck bombings on August 7, 1998, targeting US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, killing 224 people. Most of the victims were Kenyans but 12 Americans also died.
The mastermind behind the attacks, Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, eluded capture for 13 years before he was gunned down at a security checkpoint in Somalia's capital, Mogadishu, a month after Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was killed by Navy SEALs in Pakistan in May 2011.
Islamic Jihad's attack on Egyptian embassy in Pakistan
A suicide bomber rammed his explosive-packed truck into the Egyptian Embassy in Islamabad on November 19, 1995, killing 15 people, including the second secretary of the embassy and three Egyptian security guards.
Egypt handed down a death sentence in absentia to its citizen Ayman al-Zawahri, who led the militant group and later merged it with Al Qaeda, for this attack. Al-Zawahri succeeded bin Laden as Al Qaeda's chief.
Japanese embassy hostage crisis in Peru
Leftist Tupac Amaru rebels seized the Japanese ambassador's residence in Lima, Peru, on December 17, 1996, during a party celebrating Emperor Akihito's birthday, taking diplomats, guests and government officials hostage and demanding the release of their imprisoned comrades.
The rebels held 72 hostages for 126 days before government troops stormed the premises; one hostage, two commandos and all rebels were killed. The story inspired the best-seller “Bel Canto” by US author Ann Patchett.
Attacks on Israeli embassy, Jewish centre in Argentina
A bomb flattened the Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires on March 18, 1992, killing 29 people, including four Israelis. Two years later, a Jewish community centre in the city was bombed, killing 85 people — the deadliest bombing ever in Argentina.
Israel and Argentina have long accused Iran of being behind the bombings. Iran has denied any role in the attacks.