Islam najis itu bikin onar lagi...

Dulu karena ada buku Salman Rushdie..

Lalu ada kartun dari Danemark...

Sekarang ada film...


http://edition.cnn.com/2012/09/12/world/meast/egypt-us-embassy-protests/index.html?hpt=hp_t1

        
[CNN]
 
Another protest turns violent outside U.S. Embassy in Cairo - CNN.com
By the CNN Wire Staff
September 13, 2012 -- Updated 0206 GMT (1006 HKT)
        
CNN.com

Cairo (CNN) -- Riot police fired warning shots and tear gas Thursday outside 
the U.S. Embassy in Cairo to keep hundreds of protesters away from the 
building's perimeter, witnesses said.

Six police officers suffered minor injuries during the clashes, said Alla 
Mahmoud, a spokesman for the Egyptian Interior Ministry. Some protesters 
received medical treatment inside ambulances.

Demonstrators threw rocks and Molotov cocktails as police tried to disperse 
them by firing tear gas canisters from police vehicles as they drove through 
Tahrir Square, near the embassy.

The clashes came amid heightened tensions at U.S. diplomatic missions in the 
region following Tuesday's attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya, 
that left Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens and three other consular officials 
dead.

On Tuesday, the 11th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, several men 
scaled the walls of the U.S. Embassy in Cairo and tore down its U.S. flag.

About 500 protesters turned out Wednesday in Cairo to demonstrate against a 
film that mocks Islam's prophet.

Wednesday night's protest turned violent as demonstrators threw rocks and 
pushed through barbed wire fencing outside the embassy, according to Mahmoud. 
Two police trucks and a car were set afire.

"Forces were able to push them down toward Tahrir Square farther from embassy 
street," Mahmoud said, adding that some arrests had been made.

Many of the protesters chanted anti-U.S. slogans. By early Thursday, protesters 
had been pushed 100 yards from the embassy, said journalist Ian Lee in Cairo.

More than a dozen people were injured in the clashes, which continued after 
midnight, said Khaled Khatib of the Health Ministry.

Earlier, Egypt's president spoke in the "strongest terms" about Tuesday's 
incident at the Cairo embassy -- but not against the attack.

WhiIe Egypt's prime minister called Tuesday's incident "regrettable" and 
unjustified, President Mohamed Morsy condemned the anti-Muslim film that 
incited the protesters.

Morsy made a reference to Egypt's duty to protect diplomatic missions and its 
opposition to unlawful protesters, but did not mention those who stormed the 
embassy.

"The presidency condemns in the strongest terms the attempt of a group to 
insult the place of the Messenger, the Prophet Mohammed (PBUH) and condemns the 
people who have produced this radical work," the president said in a statement 
posted on his Facebook page. "The Egyptian people, both Muslims and Christians, 
refuse such insults on sanctities."

The statement noted that "the Egyptian government is responsible to protect 
private and public properties and diplomatic missions in addition to embassy 
headquarters of various countries" and that "it respects and protects the right 
of expression and the right to protest peacefully under the law and will firmly 
oppose any irresponsible attempt to veer off the law."
Fringe group behind Libya attacks?
Protesters storm US embassy buildings
Middle East attacks against U.S.

Tuesday, police and Egyptian army personnel formed defensive lines around the 
U.S. Embassy to prevent demonstrators from advancing, but not before the 
protesters had affixed a black flag atop a ladder in the American compound.

The flag was adorned with white characters that read, "There is no God but 
Allah and Mohammed is his messenger," a phrase often used by Islamic radicals.

Warning shots were fired as a crowd gathered around the compound, although it 
was not clear who fired the shots. There were no reported casualties.

Four protesters were arrested and were being questioned for "going off track to 
what is accepted as peaceful protesting," said Interior Ministry spokesman Alla 
Mahmoud.

The Cairo incident was not nearly as bad as the violence in neighboring Libya, 
where an attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi killed four Americans, 
including Stevens. The Libya attack has been blamed on a pro-al Qaeda group, 
according to sources tracking militant groups in the region.

It was unclear if the two attacks were coordinated. Protesters in both 
countries were upset over an online film that depicts Islam as a fraudulent 
religion and the Prophet Mohammed as a womanizer, child molester and ruthless 
killer.

In his statement, Morsy called on Egyptian diplomats in Washington "to take 
legal action against those people who seek to ruin relationships and 
discussions between people and countries."

The incident comes amid a delicate period in the relationship between the 
United States and Egypt under Morsy, the country's first leader since the 
overthrow last year of longtime ruler Hosni Mubarak, a key Western ally.

Analysis: Morsy making up foreign policy as he goes along

Embassy officials issued a warning to Americans in Egypt, telling them to avoid 
the demonstrations.

Frenzied protesters could be seen Tuesday afternoon holding up bits of a 
shredded American flag to television camera crews while chanting anti-U.S. 
slogans.

"This is an expression of a feeling that is thought to be an insult," said 
Nizih El Naggary, a spokesman for the Egyptian Foreign Ministry. "But events 
like this are extremely deplorable. And we have to work to get things under 
control."

Egypt's Foreign Ministry pledged to protect embassies and warned of the 
protests' potentially debilitating effects on the Egyptian economy.

Several individuals claimed responsibility for organizing the demonstrations, 
including Salafist leader Wesam Abdel-Wareth, president of Egypt's conservative 
Hekma television channel.

Demonstrations elicited a mixture of reactions from the Egyptian street, where 
last year tens of thousands turned out in opposition to Mubarak.

"These protests are a bad image for Egypt," said Ahmed, a Cairo street vendor. 
"Of course I'm against insulting Islam, but it's the undereducated, poor people 
who are out here causing problems."

"All I want for Egypt is security and stability," he said. "And as you can see 
this isn't it."

Report: Egypt's ex-PM Ahmed Shafik faces arrest, extradition order
© 2012 Cable News Network. Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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