Embassies targeted as protests against 'Innocence of Muslims' film spread
Originally published:
September 14, 2012 7:31 AM
Updated: September
14, 2012 2:26 PM
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Angry protests over an anti-Islam film spread across the Muslim world
Friday, with demonstrators scaling the walls of U.S. embassies in
Tunisia and Sudan and torching part of a German embassy.
Amid
the turmoil, Islamic militants waving black banners and shouting "God is
great" stormed an international peacekeepers base in Egypt's Sinai and
battled troops, wounding four Colombians.
Egypt's new Islamist
president went on national TV and appealed to Muslims to not attack
embassies, denouncing the violence earlier this week in Libya that
killed four Americans, including the U.S. ambassador. Mohammed Morsi's
first public move to restrain protesters after days of near silence
appeared aimed at repairing strains with the United States over this
week's violence.
Throughout the region, security forces
struggled to rein in protesters. Police in Cairo prevented
stone-throwing demonstrators from nearing the U.S. Embassy, firing tear
gas and deploying armored vehicles in a fourth day of clashes in the
Egyptian capital. At least three protesters were killed around the
region.
The day of protests, which spread to around 20
countries, started small and mostly peacefully in countries such as
Indonesia, Malaysia, India, Afghanistan and Pakistan. The most violent
demonstrations took place in the Middle East. In many places, only a few
hundred took to the streets, mostly ultraconservative Islamists — but
the mood was often furious.
The demonstrators came out after
weekly Friday Muslim prayers, where many clerics in their mosque sermons
urged congregations to defend their faith, denouncing the obscure movie
produced in the United States that denigrated the Prophet Muhammad. It
was a dramatic expansion of protests that began earlier this week and
saw assaults on the U.S. embassies in Egypt and Yemen and the storming
of the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya.
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Several thousand battled with Tunisian security forces outside the U.S.
Embassy in Tunis. Protesters rained down stones on police firing
volleys of tear gas and shooting into the air. Some protesters scaled
the embassy wall and stood on top of it, planting the Islamist flag that
has become a symbol of the wave of protests: A black banner with the
Islamic profession of faith, "There is no god but Allah and Muhammad is
his prophet."
Police chased them off the wall and took the flag
down. Two protesters were killed and 29 people were wounded, including
police.
The heaviest violence came in Sudan, where a prominent
sheik on state radio urged protesters to march on the German Embassy to
protest alleged anti-Muslim graffiti on mosques in Berlin and then to
the U.S. Embassy to protest the film.
"America has long been an enemy to Islam and to Sudan," Sheik Mohammed Jizouly said.
Soon after, several hundred Sudanese stormed into the German Embassy,
setting part of an embassy building aflame along with trash bins and a
parked car. Protesters danced and celebrated around the burning barrels
as palls of black smoke billowed into the sky until police firing tear
gas drove them out of the compound. Some then began to demonstrate
outside the neighboring British Embassy, shouting slogans.
Several thousand then moved on the American Embassy, on the capital's
outskirts. They tried to storm the mission, clashing with Sudanese
police, who opened fire on some who tried to scale the compound's wall.
It was not clear whether any protesters made it into the embassy
grounds.
The police then launched giant volleys of tear gas to
disperse the crowd, starting a stampede. Witnesses reported seeing three
protesters motionless on the ground, apparently dead, though there was
no immediate confirmation of deaths in the violence.
The attack
on the peacekeepers base in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula raised the
dangerous prospect of armed Islamic militants exploiting the turmoil to
carry out attacks on Western targets. The base near the border with Gaza
and Israel houses some 1,500 members of the multinational force,
including American troops.
Gunmen waving the black Islamist
banner and shouting "God is great" stormed into the base, firing
automatic weapons. They set fire to vehicles and battled with
peacekeepers inside, said a senior official with the force, speaking on
condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the
press. Four Colombian peacekeepers were wounded and were evacuated to
Israel.
The official said it appeared the attack was connected
to the wider protests in the region. The lawless Sinai is home to a
number of armed jihadi groups, some of whom launched an surprise attack
on Egyptian troops in August, killing 16. In recent years, there have
been several attacks on peacekeepers' vehicles in the area, but not such
a brazen attack on their base. The multinational force was deployed in
Sinai under the 1979 peace accord between Egypt and Israel.
Ahead of the expected wave of protests on Friday — a traditional day for
rallies in the Islamic world — U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham
Clinton explicitly denounced the movie, aiming to pre-empt further
turmoil at its embassies and consulates. The film, called "Innocence of
Muslims," ridicules the Prophet Muhammad, portraying him as a fraud, a
womanizer and a child molester.
"The United States government
had absolutely nothing to do with this video," she said before a meeting
with the foreign minister of Morocco at the State Department. "We
absolutely reject its content and message." She said the video was
"disgusting and reprehensible."
Egypt's Morsi said his TV
address that "it is required by our religion to protect our guests and
their homes and places of work," he said.
He called the killing
of the American ambassador in Libya unacceptable in Islam. "To God,
attacking a person is bigger than an attack on the Kaaba," he said,
referring to Islam's holiest site in Mecca.
His speech came
after President Barack Obama spoke with Morsi by telephone. The Obama
administration has been angered by Morsi's slow response to the attack
Tuesday night on the U.S. Embassy in Cairo. He made little more than
vague statements about it for days without an outright condemnation of
the breach, in which police did nothing to stop protesters from climbing
the embassy walls.
His silence reflected the heavy pressure
that Morsi, a longtime figure from the Muslim Brotherhood, faces from
Egypt's powerful ultraconservative Islamists. They are using the film
issue to boost their own political prominence while challenging Morsi's
religious credentials.
Leaders of Egypt's Jihad group, a former
militant organization, held a conference in the Egyptian city of
Alexandria and said anyone involved in "defamation" of the prophet
should be killed. They called on Morsi to cut relations with U.S.
"I appeal to President Mohammed Morsi to cut our relations with those
monkeys and pigs," said Rifaei Taha, a leading member of the group.
Several hundred people, mainly ultraconservatives, protested in Cairo's
Tahrir Square after weekly Muslim Friday prayers and tore up an
American flag, waving the Islamist flag. A firebrand ultraconservative
Salafi cleric blasted the film in his sermon in Tahrir, saying Muslims
must defend Islam and its prophet.
Many in the crowd then moved
to join protesters who have been clashing for several days with police
between Tahrir and the U.S. Embassy. "With our soul, our blood, we will
avenge you, our Prophet," they chanted as police fired volleys of tear
gas.
Elsewhere, one protester was killed in the northern
Lebanese city of Tripoli in clashes with security forces, after a crowd
of protesters set fire to a KFC and a Hardee's restaurant. Protesters
hurled stones and glass at police in a furious melee that left 25 people
wounded, 18 of them police.
In east Jerusalem, Israeli police
stopped a crowd of around 400 Palestinians from marching on the U.S.
consulate to protest the film. Demonstrators threw bottles and stones at
police, who responded by firing stun grenades. Four protesters were
arrested.
Security forces in Yemen shot live rounds in the air
and fired tear gas at a crowd of around 2,000 protesters trying to march
to the U.S. Embassy in the capital, Sanaa. Though outnumbered by
protesters, security forces were able to keep the crowd about a block
away from the mission.
A day earlier, hundreds of protesters
chanting "death to America" stormed the embassy compound in Sanaa and
burned the American flag. Four protesters were killed and 38 people
wounded in that incident when police tried to clear the crowd, the
Interior Ministry said Friday. The embassy said no staff was harmed.
In Tripoli and Benghazi, civil society groups planned demonstrations to
voice their opposition to violence and the killing of the U.S.
ambassador in Tuesday night's attack on the U.S. consulate. Worshippers
during Friday prayers said that they will carry flowers and lay them in
front of the ambassador's house in Benghazi.
Hundreds of
hardline Muslims held peaceful protests against the film throughout
Pakistan, shouting slogans and carrying banners criticizing the U.S. and
those involved in the film. Police in Islamabad set up barricades and
razor wire to prevent protesters from getting to the diplomatic enclave,
where the U.S. Embassy and many other foreign missions are located.
About 1,500 protest in the eastern city of Jalalabad, shouting "Death
to America" and urge President Hamid Karzai to cut relations with the
U.S.
6/20/2014
Embassies targeted as protests against 'Innocence of Muslims' film spread
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