Fierce fighting near the port of Libya's eastern city of    Benghazi set fire to a large ship Monday, with witnesses and    the country's military spokesman disagreeing whether it was an    oil tanker or a naval warship engulfed in flames.  
    Mohammed Hegazi, the army spokesman, told The Associated Press    that Islamist militias fired rocket propelled grenades from    high-rise buildings overlooking the port, hitting an oil    tanker.  
    "I saw it with my own eyes and it is a small oil tanker," he    said, declining to divulge any more details about the tanker.    He added that the army has previously warned oil tankers from    entering Benghazi port, and said it's not clear why the tanker    was present in the port. The Benghazi port has been closed for    weeks.  
    However, witnesses who spoke to the AP said it was a naval    warship that was hit in the crossfire. It was not immediately    possible to clarify the discrepancies between the two accounts.  
    One resident said clashes in streets adjacent to the port    started at mid-day Monday and intensified quickly. The shooting    often appeared random, he said.  
    "I saw families running for their lives out of the    neighborhood. I even saw women going out of the area without    their shoes," he said. "A state of panic has taken over the    neighborhood." He spoke on the condition of anonymity because    he was concerned for his safety.  
    Hegazi said army troops battled the militias in the city's    central districts, home to Benghazi's courthouse. The    courthouse was a center for the 2011 uprising in Benghazi, the    first city to rise up against longtime dictator Moammar    Gadhafi's rule. Gadhafi was killed nearly eight months later,    but Libya's turmoil has continued as rebels turned into    militiamen and mushroomed in number and power, posing a serious    challenge to the country's elected authorities.  
    Clashes in Benghazi have killed at least 210 people since    government troops backed by armed civilians started a campaign    in mid-October to retake the city from Islamist militias.  
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Battle in East Libya's Benghazi Sets Ship Ablaze