U.S.
House Benghazi panel grills Clinton aide Huma Abedin for six hours
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[October 17, 2015]
By Susan Cornwell
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Turmoil swirled
again around the Republican-controlled Benghazi committee on Friday as
it questioned a senior aide to Hillary Clinton, prompting fresh
accusations that the panel was created to damage the Democratic
front-runner's presidential campaign.
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In a six-hour closed door interview, members and staff sought
answers from Huma Abedin, for years a close confidante of Clinton.
Abedin has served as the former secretary of state's assistant at
the time of the 2012 attacks on U.S. diplomatic facilities in
Benghazi, Libya that killed four Americans.
Democratic Representative and panel member Elijah Cummings told
reporters that summoning Abedin raised more questions about whether
the panel is "a taxpayer funded effort to derail the candidacy of
Hillary Clinton."
Cummings said Abedin, now campaign vice chairwoman of Clinton's 2016
presidential campaign, had no responsibilities related to the
tragedy the committee was set up to investigate.
Abedin said little about the interview. But she read a handwritten
statement afterward, saying she "answered all of their questions to
the best of my ability."
"I came here today to be as helpful as I could be to the committee.
I wanted to honor the service of those lost and injured in the
Benghazi attacks," Abedin said, adding she was "honored" to work for
Clinton at State and "proud" of her service there.
Representative Lynn Westmoreland, a Republican panel member, said
Abedin frequently answered questions with responses of "'I don't
remember' and 'I don't recollect.'"
He did not reveal the questions that prompted such answers.
Representative Trey Gowdy, the panel's Republican chairman, said
Abedin's testimony would assist the committee in writing a final
report.
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Though not in attendance, Gowdy said in a statement that the panel
"greatly appreciates her willingness to take the time to voluntarily
appear before the committee."
Abedin's appearance came less than a week before Clinton is to
appear before the panel.
Organized originally to probe the 2012 attack on U.S. facilities in
Benghazi, Libya, the committee has been under attack by Democrats,
who say it is a partisan investigation unleashed by the
Republican-majority House.
The committee has come under especially harsh criticism since
Representative Kevin McCarthy, the No. 2 House Republican, suggested
in a recent television interview that the probe had helped to drive
down Clinton's presidential poll ratings.
Cummings said Friday that the panel's calling in Abedin was more
evidence that McCarthy had been telling the truth about the
committee's real aims.
(Additional reporting by David Lawder; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh,
Tom Brown and David Gregorio)
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