Islam itu betul-betul adalah agama tukang bikin onar dan keributan...
[CNN]
Hezbollah calls for new film protests - CNN.com
By the CNN Wire Staff
September 16, 2012 -- Updated 2055 GMT (0455 HKT)
CNN.com
(CNN) -- The leader of Lebanon's Shiite Muslim movement Hezbollah called for
new protests Monday over an anti-Islamic film that sparked violent
anti-American demonstrations across the Middle East last week.
Speaking on Hezbollah's al-Manar television service Sunday night, Hassan
Nasrallah said the movie -- excerpts of which have been posted online --
"represents a dangerous turn in the war against Islam and the great prophet,
peace be upon him."
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"We must stress that should be awareness among Muslims and Christians not to
let any strife take place in any country or any place in the world," Nasrallah
said. "The people who should be accountable, and brought to justice as well as
punished and boycotted, are those directly responsible for the film and those
who support them and protect them. And it is the United States of America that
is at the forefront of those."
Protests calm, but tensions remain as U.S. seeks to protect embassies
A 14-minute trailer for the movie mocks the Prophet Mohammed as a womanizer,
child molester and ruthless killer. The movie was privately produced by a man
federal officials identified as Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, a California man on
probation for bank fraud, and authorities have said they are reviewing whether
he violated the terms of his release.
The trailer has provoked riots, demonstrations and attacks across the region
that have left numerous dead, including the U.S. ambassador to Libya and three
others killed in an attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi.
In Lebanon, demonstrators in the northern city of Tripoli attacked and burned
down a KFC restaurant on Friday, leaving one dead and 25 others wounded in
clashes between police and protesters.
Other protests continued into Sunday, when Pakistani police armed with batons
and water cannon pushed demonstrators back from the U.S. Consulate in Karachi.
President Barack Obama said Saturday that the United States stands for
religious freedom and rejects "the denigration of any religion, including
Islam." But he added, "There is no excuse for attacks on our embassies and
consulates."
Nasrallah said Muslims have asked the U.S. government to suppress the film,
"but the U.S. administration has done nothing."
"Their well-known excuse is the issue of freedom -- freedom of expression,
American values and the like," he said. He said there should be "an
international decision enforced by international organizations" to prosecute
people who insult the prophets of Islam, Judaism and Christianity.
Zakaria: What the Mideast protests reveal
© 2012 Cable News Network. Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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