Morrow County Sentinel.com

New violent anti-US protests erupt

KABUL, Afghanistan – 9/17/12 Hun­dreds of Afghans burned cars and threw rocks at a U.S. mil­i­tary base as a demon­stra­tion against an anti-Islam film that ridicules the Prophet Muham­mad turned vio­lent in the Afghan cap­i­tal early Monday.

And in Jakarta, Indone­sians angered over the film clashed with police out­side the U.S. Embassy, hurl­ing rocks and Molo­tov cock­tails and burn­ing tires out­side the mis­sion. At least one police offi­cer was seen bleed­ing from the head and being car­ried to safety by fel­low officers.

The low-budget film, pri­vately pro­duced in the United States, por­trays Muham­mad as a fraud, a wom­an­izer and a child moles­ter. It sparked vio­lent protests in many Mus­lim coun­tries in recent days, many of them out­side U.S. diplo­matic posts around the world.

The U.S. Ambas­sador to Libya was killed dur­ing an attack on the con­sulate in Beng­hazi last week; pro­test­ers have also stormed the U.S. Embassy in Tunis and held vio­lent demon­stra­tions out­side posts in Egypt and Sudan. The U.S. has responded by deploy­ing addi­tional mil­i­tary forces to increase secu­rity in cer­tain hotspots.

In Kabul on Mon­day, the air was thick with smoke on Jalal­abad road — a main thor­ough­fare into the city cen­ter where the crowd burned ship­ping con­tain­ers and tires. At least one police vehi­cle was burned by the mob before they finally dis­persed around mid­day, accord­ing Daoud Amin, the deputy police chief for Kabul province.

Ear­lier in the morn­ing, men lobbed rocks from the pave­ment and lobbed them at Camp Phoenix, a U.S. mil­i­tary base that lies along the road. More than 20 police offi­cers were slightly injured — all from being hit by rocks, said Gen. Fahim Qaim, the com­man­der of a city quick-reaction police force.

Death to Amer­ica!” and “Death to those peo­ple who have made a film and insulted our prophet,” shouted the crowd. Police offi­cers shot into the air to hold back about 800 peo­ple and pre­vent them from push­ing toward gov­ern­ment build­ings down­town, said Azizul­lah, a police offi­cer at the site who, like many Afghans, only goes by one name.

As the Jalal­abad rally was bro­ken up, demon­stra­tions picked up else­where in the city. In the south­east­ern part of Kabul, about 50 pro­test­ers gath­ered in front of a mosque, shout­ing “Death to Amer­ica,” said police offi­cer Ahmad Shafiq but there were no signs of violence.

Pro­tester Moham­mad Humayun, 28, called on Pres­i­dent Barack Obama to bring those who have insulted the prophet to justice.

Peo­ple around the world are angry,” he added. “It is the respon­si­bil­ity of all Mus­lims to show reac­tion when­ever they hear any dis­re­gard and disrespect.”

Wahidul­lah Hotak, another pro­tester, said the ral­lies will con­tinue “until the peo­ple who made the film go to trial.”

A num­ber of Afghan reli­gious lead­ers urged calm.

Our respon­si­bil­ity is to show a peace­ful reac­tion, to hold peace­ful protests. Do not harm peo­ple, their prop­erty or pub­lic prop­erty,” said Karimul­lah Saqib, a cleric in Kabul.

Out­side the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta, peo­ple also tried to ignite a fire truck as Molo­tov cock­tails exploded against a fence sur­round­ing the embassy com­pound. Police used a bull­horn to call for calm.

The demon­stra­tion started off peace­fully as the group of sev­eral hun­dred pro­test­ers, many dressed in white, marched toward the mis­sion. The U.S. Embassy has issued an emer­gency mes­sage to Amer­i­can cit­i­zens, say­ing about 1,000 peo­ple were expected to demon­strate in front of the mis­sion with about 1,500 police on hand.

Demon­stra­tions were also held Mon­day in the Indone­sian cities of Medan and Ban­dung. Over the week­end in the cen­tral Java town of Solo, pro­test­ers stormed KFC and McDonald’s restau­rants, forc­ing cus­tomers to leave and man­age­ment to close the stores.

In neigh­bor­ing Pak­istan, around 3,000 stu­dents and teach­ers ral­lied Mon­day against the film in the town of Chaman in south­west­ern Baluchis­tan province. The crowd burned an Amer­i­can flag and an effigy of Obama, said offi­cer Moham­mad Shahid.

Teacher Abdul Malik said it was an oblig­a­tion of all Mus­lims to protest the video, while Abdul Waris, a 12-year-old stu­dent who attended the rally, said his teach­ers told him the U.S. and Israel pro­duced the film. The teach­ers can­celed classes and told the stu­dents to go protest

Hun­dreds of peo­ple set fire to a press club and a gov­ern­ment office in north­west Pak­istan, spark­ing clashes with police that killed one demonstrator.

Police offi­cial Mukhtar Ahmad says the pro­test­ers first attacked the press club in Khy­ber Pakhtunkhwa province’s Upper Dir dis­trict Mon­day, appar­ently angered because their demon­stra­tion wasn’t get­ting more coverage.

Ahmad says police charged the crowd, beat­ing pro­test­ers with batons. The pro­test­ers then attacked a gov­ern­ment office and set it ablaze. Ahmad says the pro­test­ers, many of them armed, have now sur­rounded a local police station.

The Afghan gov­ern­ment has blocked video-sharing web site YouTube to pre­vent Afghans from view­ing a clip of the anti-Muslim film. Offi­cials have said it will remain blocked until the video is taken down. Other Google ser­vices, includ­ing Gmail, were also blocked in Afghanistan dur­ing much of the week­end and the block con­tin­ued on some providers Monday.

The wave of inter­na­tional vio­lence began Tues­day when mainly Islamist pro­test­ers climbed the U.S. Embassy walls in the Egypt­ian cap­i­tal of Cairo and tore down the Amer­i­can flag from a pole in the courtyard.

Chris Stevens, the U.S. ambas­sador to Libya, was killed Tues­day along with three other Amer­i­cans, as vio­lent pro­test­ers stormed the con­sulate in Beng­hazi. Obama has vowed that the attack­ers would be brought to jus­tice but also stressed that the U.S. respects reli­gious freedom.

Randa Wagner Posted by on Sep 17 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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