At least 15 killed in protests of anti-Muslim film

PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) - Protests over an anti-Muslim film turned violent Friday across Pakistan, with police firing tear gas and live ammunition at thousands of demonstrators who threw rocks and set fire to buildings. At least 15 people were killed and dozens were injured.
Muslims also marched in at least a half-dozen other countries, with some burning American flags and effigies of U.S. President Barack Obama.
Pakistan has experienced nearly a week of deadly protests over the film, "Innocence of Muslims," that has sparked anti-American violence around the Islamic world since it emerged on the Internet in the past 10 days. The deaths of at least 45 people, including the U.S. ambassador to Libya, have been linked to the violence over the film, which was made in California and denigrates the Prophet Muhammad.
The Pakistani government declared Friday to be a national holiday - "Love for the Prophet Day" - and encouraged peaceful protests.
The U.S. Embassy spent $70,000 for advertisements on Pakistani TV that featured Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton denouncing the video. Their comments, which are from previous public events in Washington, are in English but subtitled in Urdu, the main Pakistani language.
The deadliest violence occurred in the southern port city of Karachi, where 12 people were killed and 82 wounded, according to Seemi Jamali and Aftab Channar, officials at two hospitals.
Armed demonstrators among a crowd of 15,000 in that city fired on police, according to police officer Ahmad Hassan. The crowd also burned two cinemas and a bank, he said.
Three people were killed and 61 wounded in the northwestern city of Peshawar, said police official Bashir Khan. Police fired on rioters who set fire to two movie theaters and the city's chamber of commerce, and damaged shops and vehicles.
One of the dead was identified as Mohammad Amir, a driver for a Pakistani TV station who was killed when police bullets hit his vehicle, which was parked near the cinema, said Kashif Mahmood, a reporter for ARY TV who also was in the car. The TV channel showed doctors at a hospital trying unsuccessfully to save Amir's life.
Police beat demonstrators with batons. Later in the day, tens of thousands of protesters converged in a neighborhood and called for the maker of the film, an American citizen originally from Egypt, to be executed.
Police and stone-throwers also clashed in Lahore and Islamabad, the capital. Police fired tear gas and warning shots to try to keep them from advancing toward U.S. missions in the cities.
Hospital official Tanveer Malik says 25 people were wounded in Islamabad.
Police clashed with over 10,000 demonstrators in several neighborhoods, including in front of a five-star hotel near the diplomatic enclave where the U.S. Embassy and other foreign missions are located. A military helicopter buzzed overhead as the sound of tear gas being fired echoed across the city.
The government temporarily blocked cellphone service in 15 major cities to prevent militants from using phones to detonate bombs during the protests, said an Interior Ministry official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media. Blocking cellphones could make it harder for people to organize protests as well.
Pakistan's Foreign Ministry on Friday summoned the U.S. charge d'affaires in Islamabad, Richard Hoagland, over the film. Pakistan has banned access to YouTube because the website refused to remove the video.
Pakistani Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf had urged the international community to pass laws to prevent people from insulting the prophet.
"If denying the Holocaust is a crime, then is it not fair and legitimate for a Muslim to demand that denigrating and demeaning Islam's holiest personality is no less than a crime?" Ashraf said in a speech to religious scholars and international diplomats in Islamabad.
Denying the Holocaust is a crime in Germany, but not in the U.S.
U.S. officials have tried to explain to the Muslim world how they strongly disagree with the anti-Islam film but have no ability to block it because of free speech guarantees.
In Iraq, about 3,000 protesters condemned the film and caricatures of the prophet that were published in a French satirical weekly. The protest in the southern city of Basra was organized by Iranian-backed Shiite groups. Some protesters raised Iraqi flags and posters of Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, while chanting: "Death to America."
Protesters burned Israeli and U.S. flags and raised a banner that read: "We condemn the offenses made against the prophet."
In the Sri Lanka capital of Colombo, about 2,000 Muslims burned effigies of Obama and U.S. flags at a protest after Friday prayers, demanding that the United States ban the film. In Bangladesh, more than 2,000 people marched in the capital, Dhaka, and burned a makeshift coffin draped in an American flag and an effigy of Obama.
They also burned a French flag to protest the publication of the caricatures of the prophet. Small and mostly orderly protests were also held in Malaysia and Indonesia.
Thousands gathered in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley for the latest in a series of rallies organized by the Shiite militant group Hezbollah. Protesters carried the yellow Hezbollah flag.
Hezbollah appeared to be trying to ensure the gatherings don't become violent, planning them only in areas where Hezbollah has control. None of the rallies targets the heavily fortified U.S. Embassy in the hills outside Beirut.
Police clamped a daylong curfew in parts of Indian-controlled Kashmir's main city, Srinagar, and chased away protesters opposing the anti-Islam film. Authorities in the region also temporarily blocked cell phone and Internet services to prevent viewing the film clips.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad also lashed out at the West over the film and the caricatures in the French weekly, Charlie Hebdo.
"In return for (allowing) the ugliest insults to the divine messenger, they - the West - raise the slogan of respect for freedom of speech," said Ahmadinejad during a speech in the capital, Tehran.
He said this explanation was "clearly a deception."
In Germany, the Interior Ministry said it was postponing a poster campaign aimed at countering radical Islam among young people due to tensions caused by the online video insulting Islam. It said posters for the campaign - in German, Turkish and Arabic - were meant to go on display in German cities with large immigrant populations on Friday but are being withheld because of the changed security situation. Germany is home to an estimated 4 million Muslims.
Muslims also marched in at least a half-dozen other countries, with some burning American flags and effigies of U.S. President Barack Obama.
Pakistan has experienced nearly a week of deadly protests over the film, "Innocence of Muslims," that has sparked anti-American violence around the Islamic world since it emerged on the Internet in the past 10 days. The deaths of at least 45 people, including the U.S. ambassador to Libya, have been linked to the violence over the film, which was made in California and denigrates the Prophet Muhammad.
The Pakistani government declared Friday to be a national holiday - "Love for the Prophet Day" - and encouraged peaceful protests.
The U.S. Embassy spent $70,000 for advertisements on Pakistani TV that featured Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton denouncing the video. Their comments, which are from previous public events in Washington, are in English but subtitled in Urdu, the main Pakistani language.
The deadliest violence occurred in the southern port city of Karachi, where 12 people were killed and 82 wounded, according to Seemi Jamali and Aftab Channar, officials at two hospitals.
Armed demonstrators among a crowd of 15,000 in that city fired on police, according to police officer Ahmad Hassan. The crowd also burned two cinemas and a bank, he said.
Three people were killed and 61 wounded in the northwestern city of Peshawar, said police official Bashir Khan. Police fired on rioters who set fire to two movie theaters and the city's chamber of commerce, and damaged shops and vehicles.
One of the dead was identified as Mohammad Amir, a driver for a Pakistani TV station who was killed when police bullets hit his vehicle, which was parked near the cinema, said Kashif Mahmood, a reporter for ARY TV who also was in the car. The TV channel showed doctors at a hospital trying unsuccessfully to save Amir's life.
Police beat demonstrators with batons. Later in the day, tens of thousands of protesters converged in a neighborhood and called for the maker of the film, an American citizen originally from Egypt, to be executed.
Police and stone-throwers also clashed in Lahore and Islamabad, the capital. Police fired tear gas and warning shots to try to keep them from advancing toward U.S. missions in the cities.
Hospital official Tanveer Malik says 25 people were wounded in Islamabad.
Police clashed with over 10,000 demonstrators in several neighborhoods, including in front of a five-star hotel near the diplomatic enclave where the U.S. Embassy and other foreign missions are located. A military helicopter buzzed overhead as the sound of tear gas being fired echoed across the city.
The government temporarily blocked cellphone service in 15 major cities to prevent militants from using phones to detonate bombs during the protests, said an Interior Ministry official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media. Blocking cellphones could make it harder for people to organize protests as well.
Pakistan's Foreign Ministry on Friday summoned the U.S. charge d'affaires in Islamabad, Richard Hoagland, over the film. Pakistan has banned access to YouTube because the website refused to remove the video.
Pakistani Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf had urged the international community to pass laws to prevent people from insulting the prophet.
"If denying the Holocaust is a crime, then is it not fair and legitimate for a Muslim to demand that denigrating and demeaning Islam's holiest personality is no less than a crime?" Ashraf said in a speech to religious scholars and international diplomats in Islamabad.
Denying the Holocaust is a crime in Germany, but not in the U.S.
U.S. officials have tried to explain to the Muslim world how they strongly disagree with the anti-Islam film but have no ability to block it because of free speech guarantees.
In Iraq, about 3,000 protesters condemned the film and caricatures of the prophet that were published in a French satirical weekly. The protest in the southern city of Basra was organized by Iranian-backed Shiite groups. Some protesters raised Iraqi flags and posters of Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, while chanting: "Death to America."
Protesters burned Israeli and U.S. flags and raised a banner that read: "We condemn the offenses made against the prophet."
In the Sri Lanka capital of Colombo, about 2,000 Muslims burned effigies of Obama and U.S. flags at a protest after Friday prayers, demanding that the United States ban the film. In Bangladesh, more than 2,000 people marched in the capital, Dhaka, and burned a makeshift coffin draped in an American flag and an effigy of Obama.
They also burned a French flag to protest the publication of the caricatures of the prophet. Small and mostly orderly protests were also held in Malaysia and Indonesia.
Thousands gathered in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley for the latest in a series of rallies organized by the Shiite militant group Hezbollah. Protesters carried the yellow Hezbollah flag.
Hezbollah appeared to be trying to ensure the gatherings don't become violent, planning them only in areas where Hezbollah has control. None of the rallies targets the heavily fortified U.S. Embassy in the hills outside Beirut.
Police clamped a daylong curfew in parts of Indian-controlled Kashmir's main city, Srinagar, and chased away protesters opposing the anti-Islam film. Authorities in the region also temporarily blocked cell phone and Internet services to prevent viewing the film clips.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad also lashed out at the West over the film and the caricatures in the French weekly, Charlie Hebdo.
"In return for (allowing) the ugliest insults to the divine messenger, they - the West - raise the slogan of respect for freedom of speech," said Ahmadinejad during a speech in the capital, Tehran.
He said this explanation was "clearly a deception."
In Germany, the Interior Ministry said it was postponing a poster campaign aimed at countering radical Islam among young people due to tensions caused by the online video insulting Islam. It said posters for the campaign - in German, Turkish and Arabic - were meant to go on display in German cities with large immigrant populations on Friday but are being withheld because of the changed security situation. Germany is home to an estimated 4 million Muslims.
We all need to keep in mind that in the countries that have had these demonstration/riots, the governments have only allowed demonstrations about the movie. This rule started in Egypt after obama called Morsi and asked him the control the demonstrators on 9-12-12. Morsi told Obama he would not stop the people from demonstrating against the insults to Mohammed. The rest of the Muslim world followed the same rule.
Cool lets make more movies and they can all kill themselves, burn down there own citys and we don't even have to go to war with them!!!!Â
Hey Ahmadinejad! Â That explanation about freedom of speech being clearly a deception...brilliant. Â
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Think I'm going to invite over some friends for one last barbecue this summer, get drunk and burn some flags from the middle-east.  I'll get them posted on line for you to see too dude.
Why doesn't KOMO News publish the film and the French cartoons on it's Web Site? No cojones.
Religion is poison and deserves to be ridiculed as much as possible. Freedom of speech and the First Amendment are the things that should be protected as sacred. The Mohammedans act like children and savages who demand that we accept the crap that they try to shove down our throats, when it is nothing but superstitious nonsense. I am ashamed of our President and Secty. of State trying to placate those morons.
You know there is something strange going on here, they are building something here.This is a big production, a reality show, Soon Obama will step in and solve all the problems and be our hero. They better get to the point pretty quick the overacting is getting old. In the olden days they had propaganda films and movies, now they are doing propaganda reality shows. What is this show about?????
Spread rumors that one radical group said "your mama jokes" or in their case "your Allah jokes" about another radical group. Then sit back and let them wipe out each other. Â
Remember, it has to start with this phrase... "I don't want to start nothing but......"
Good thing Americans don't get pissed off and send a nuke at every country that lets its people burn an American Flag. Muslims need to have a drink and chill!
One could probably make pretty good money in the middle east right now selling US and Israeli flags, effigies of Obama and lighter fluid.
It sounds like more people have died in "supposed outrage" at this film than people who actually saw the film.
When are the politicians going to figure out that those peolple hate us and will use any excuse to kill?
"Oh, it didn't rain today. Lets go kill some infidels."
These people are being spun up by their religious leaders, their Imams, much like a community organizer. These are synchronized events. Obama isnt very concerned, why should we be concerned or maybe its a act. I think with the amount of American flags being burnt someone would start making the flags out of a material the would give off toxic fumes when burnt. Might slow them down.....
If we want answers we should get the Univision team to interview our government officials to get this straightened and get true facts, not the biased spin.
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Note to Muslims...
You DO have the right to be insulted.
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The PROBLEM is, if it's yer wife or daughter, it's justification to MURDER them.
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This film is just another excuse for you to show your barbarism. You HATE where you live, so you leave your self imposed 3rd world middle east in search of a better life. Then you bring the HATE along with you and expect things to change?
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The sooner you come to grips that the world doesn't revolve around Islam, the sooner you can become civilised.
C'mon... Yer burning yer own buildings and killing each other over a movie? Cartoons? Insults?
15 dead, buildings and cars on fire, yep a typical peacful protest in the middle east. I can't wait to see a violent one.
Muslims have killed more Muslims than the rest of the world combined.
They can't get along with themselves, and we think we can change that?
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"The U.S. Embassy spent $70,000 for advertisements on Pakistani TV that featured Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton denouncing the video."
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Another apology tour from our Apologist in Chief. Maybe if he groveled the savages would leave us alone. Yeah, that's the ticket.
 @LockesChild And using our tax dollars to apologize to a people who would never accept the apology anyway. Just throwing $70,000 away.
"........protests of anti-Muslim film."
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Repeat this phrase enough and it will become true????
Movies and cartoons cause them to kill each other. Bomb them with videos and cartoons!!Â
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The pen (or camera) is truly mightier than the sword!!  LOL
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@Truth Percolates Force them to watch Teletubbies or Barney the dinosaur. That is worse than death.....
These people aren't happy unless they are killing someone or each other.
 @mstipton It's what the Koran commands them to do.
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Wish I had a store that sold American flags over there. Maybe we should make more movies so they can get in a real tizzy and finish destroying their own countries. A couple places are even updated to 1920âs might as burn it down nothing beyond 1645. I feel so hurt they hate us so. No not really as a soldier for 20 plus I already know this now maybe just maybe the rest of our population knows.
Question :where are the moderate Muslims denouncing this? Their protest for free speech?
A religion of peace. Yea.
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 @BocaBob They aren't going to get killed for the USA. Protecting our embassies against these savages is the job of the government of Pakistan and our own security services. I suspect they (moderate muslims) are just hoping that the savages get killed soon so they can live their lives.