Sunday, September 16, 2012
Fury over Mohammad video simmers on in Muslim world
DUBAI (Reuters) - A wave of furious anti-Western protests against a film mocking the Prophet Mohammad abated on Saturday, but U.S. policy in the Muslim world remained overshadowed by 13 minutes of amateurish video on the Internet.
Washington ordered family members and non-essential staff to leave the U.S. Embassy in Khartoum, which was attacked on Friday, after Sudan turned down its request to send Marines to bolster security.
People watch as they stand on Qaser El Niel bridge while riot police clash with protesters along a road at Kornish El Nile which leads to the U.S. embassy, near Tahrir Square in Cairo September 15, 2012. Clashes near the U.S. Embassy in central Cairo between police and Egyptians incensed over a film denigrating the Prophet Mohammad entered their fourth day early on Saturday, leaving one protester dead and dozens more injured. REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh |
In addition, it pulled non-essential personnel out of its embassy in the Tunisian capital, Tunis, also attacked on Friday, and urged American citizens to leave the city.
Marine platoons have been sent to U.S. missions in Yemen and Libya since the unrest erupted.
Elsewhere, riot police stormed into Cairo's Tahrir Square and rounded up hundreds of people after four days of clashes and demands from protesters for the U.S. ambassador to be expelled.
Saudi Arabia's highest religious authority denounced the attacks on diplomats and embassies across the Middle East as un-Islamic.
But the Yemen-based branch of al Qaeda applauded the killings of U.S. diplomats in Libya and urged Muslims to kill more, calling the video posted on the Internet another chapter in the "crusader wars" against Islam.
A California man convicted of bank fraud, who has denied reports that he was involved in the film's production, was taken in for questioning by officers investigating possible probation violations stemming from the making of the film.
Afghanistan's Taliban claimed responsibility for an attack on a base that killed two American Marines, saying it was a response to the insults to the founder of Islam.
RELATIVE CALM
Hundreds of Muslims took to the streets of Australia's largest city, some throwing rocks and bottles in clashes with police. Some carried placards reading "Behead all those who insult the Prophet".
About 80 Islamist militants were arrested in Paris while trying to demonstrate outside the U.S. Embassy near the Champs Elysees, French police sources said.
Saturday was, however, relatively calm after at least nine deaths in the Muslim world on Friday during protests and attacks on American and other Western embassies.
President Barack Obama, leading a ceremony on Friday to honour the U.S. ambassador to Libya and three other Americans who died in an attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi on September 11, vowed to "stand fast" against the violence.
"The United States will never retreat from the world," he said. The Pentagon rushed to bolster security at missions abroad.
The U.S. State Department on Saturday also urged American citizens to avoid Sudan's restive Darfur, Blue Nile and Southern Kordofan regions.
Libyan authorities said they had identified 50 people who were involved in the attack in which ambassador Christopher Stevens died.
In an interview aired on Saturday on NBC's "Nightly News," Libyan President Mohammed Magarief was quoted as saying that foreigners along with Libyans were involved in the attack on the consulate in Benghazi. He added there were 10 suspects in custody.
Saudi Arabia's Grand Mufti, Sheikh Abdulaziz bin Abdullah Al al-Sheikh, denounced the attacks while urging governments and international bodies to criminalise insults against prophets.
He described the short film as "miserable" and "criminal," but said attacks on the innocent and on diplomats were "a distortion of the Islamic religion and are not accepted by God".
FREE SPEECH LAWS
The video, circulating on the Internet under several titles including "Innocence of Muslims," portrays Mohammad as a womaniser and a fool.
"We were attacked by Obama, and his government, and the Coptic Christians living abroad!" shouted one long-bearded Muslim protester outside the U.S. Embassy in Cairo on Friday.
In the Los Angeles suburb of Cerritos, Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, 55, who has denied involvement in the film in a phone call to a Coptic Christian bishop, was ushered out of his home and into a waiting car by sheriff's deputies, his face shielded by a scarf, hat and sunglasses.
He was voluntarily interviewed by federal probation officers and left about 30 minutes later, a police spokesman said.
U.S. officials have said authorities are not investigating the film project itself, and that even if it was inflammatory or led to violence, simply producing it cannot be considered a crime in the United States, which has strong free speech laws.
A statement posted on a website used by Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula called on Muslims to "follow the example of Omar al-Mukhtar's descendants (Libyans), who killed the American ambassador".
"Let the step of kicking out the embassies be a step towards liberating Muslim countries from the American hegemony," the group said.
Hundreds of mourners in the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, attended the funeral on Saturday of a young protester shot to death when riot police battled a crowd attacking the U.S. Embassy on Thursday.
(Writing by Andrew Roche; Editing by Kevin Liffey and Peter Cooney)
Related Stories:
U.S. orders embassy staff to leave Tunis, Khartoum
Egyptian police clear protesters near U.S. mission
- Black 505 rally supporters stage another flash mob in KL
- Subramaniam: Health Ministry to set up operation rooms where API exceeds 200
- Penang freak storm: Report complete, no human remains found in car wreckage, say police
- Delays in KLIA2 opening affecting AirAsia's expansion plans, says CEO
- Open sale of sex stimulants in Sabah worries Kiulu rep Bangkuai
- Seven out of 12 Opposition reps in Sabah want Lajim as chief
- Robbery at sea of cargo ship being investigated, unsure if pirates involved, say police
- Fire and Rescue Department: 14 areas highly susceptible to forest fires identified
- Judicial Review application filed to declare appointment of ministers unconstitutional
- Lock-up deaths: Permanent coroner's court for each state to deal with deaths in custody, says Shukri
- Want a gun? Just print it out

- Lock-up deaths: Dharmendran's son will never be able to celebrate Father's Day again, says mother

- Pakatan MPs will attend Parliament swearing-in, says Anwar
- Two college students among five arrested for mass robbery
- Scrap metal dealer killed in gang territorial war
- Kulim suspended on Thursday for corporate announcement
- Petronas Dagangan eyes regional airports to expand jet fuel biz
- KLCI ends in the red, BAT, UMW down (Update)
- Gloom lifted from MRCB Southern Link as ratings upgraded
- Malaysia's May inflation rate up 1.8% on-year
- Nazir: Bank of Commerce talks to conclude shortly
- Japan's exports pick up pace, give economy momentum
- Asia business sentiment rises in second quarter, global growth risk still dominates
- Moody's: Outlook on China's life insurance industry stable
- AIA and Public Bank offer new insurance plans
- Tambun Indah plans RM200m capex to expand landbank
- Tune Ins sees healthy growth as air travel, tourism pick up
- Nazir Razak: Rising likelihood of major reversal of hot money out from Asia
- Blue chips edge higher in volatile trade (Update)
- Eversendai tendering for RM8b of projects
- French floods claim first victim, Lourdes remains closed
- Thousands evacuated after blasts at Russian arms depot
- Bieber off hook after car hits photographer
- Mexico arrests man on FBI's top 10 Most Wanted list
- Disabled woman, US child held captive with snakes
- World's largest all-solar-powered boat shines in NYC
- Samoan airline introduces 'XL' class
- West Africa has world's worst piracy rate
- Congolese teacher admits killing elephants for ivory: WWF
- NASA enlists public in hunt for major asteroids
- NBA: Heat beat Spurs to force game seven
- FedEx eyes record win at Wimbledon
- Brazilian Massa looking ahead to team’s revival
- V Shem-Khim Wah face tough opener in Singapore Open
- Springboks’ De Villiers may miss final
- Results worldwide
- Former world junior champ Zulfadli in main draw
- Star Wallaby winger fit to face Lions
- Hesson laments NZ’s failure to grab chance
- Omega Pharma pin Tour hopes on Mark
- Shahidan needs Cabinet nod to hold posts, says Khairy
- Direct flight now to Naypyitaw for Malaysian SEA Games squad
- Aussie Kulacz hopes to repeat 2009 Selangor Masters triumph
- India’s Anirban relying on short putter for success
- Iain steels himself for a good show at Seri Selangor
- Two-year-old makes touching request at her dad’s funeral
- Rush to escape storm proves deadly
- Boy nabbed for buying air rifles
- CCTV to shed light on missing hawker
- Airsoft guns are easily available online
- Mentally disabled man missing since Sunday
- Medium threatens couple with black magic
- New DAP man turns on his party after elections
- Four times as many hotspots in Sumatra now
- Peat fires and the ever-repeating haze
- Inter-Pacific Research values AirAsia X at RM1.66
- Boy nabbed for buying air rifles
- Want a gun? Just print it out
- Nazir Razak: Rising likelihood of major reversal of hot money out from Asia
- Airsoft guns are easily available online
- Talks on the proposed M’sia-Spore Rapid Transit System still going on
- EPF being courted by mid-cap companies
- MAHB sets May 2, 2014 as KLIA2 revised opening date
- Two-year-old makes touching request at her dad’s funeral
- Peat fires and the ever-repeating haze

