Demonstrations spread over anti-Islam film

Protesters angered by an anti-Islam film have stormed the US embassy compound in Yemen’s capital, Sanaa, as similar demonstrations have spread to several countries across the Middle East.

Thursday, September 13, 2012
Protesters in Yemen. Net photo.

Protesters angered by an anti-Islam film have stormed the US embassy compound in Yemen’s capital, Sanaa, as similar demonstrations have spread to several countries across the Middle East.The protesters on Thursday removed the embassy’s sign on the outer wall and brought down the US flag and burned it, according to witnesses.A number of diplomatic vehicle were torched as security forces used water cannons and warning shots in a bid to drive them out.In the Iranian capital, Tehran, up to 500 people protested over the issue chanting "Death to America!” and death to the movie’s director, an AFP photographer at the scene said.The rally, near the Swiss embassy that handles US interests in the absence of US-Iran diplomatic ties, ended peacefully two hours later.Protect guestsMeanwhile, Egypt’s President Mohamed Morsi has condemned the film that has sparked an outcry in his country."We Egyptians reject any kind of assault or insult against our prophet. I condemn and oppose all who... insult our prophet,” Morsi, on an official visit to Brussels, said in remarks broadcast by Egyptian state television."[But] it is our duty to protect our guests and visitors from abroad... I call on everyone to take that into consideration, to not violate Egyptian law... to not assault embassies,” he added.Egyptians have clashed with police outside US embassy in the capital, Cairo, for the third day.About 30 people have been injured, including more than 10 riot police in the overnight clashes, as the fallout from a film ridiculing Islam’s prophet continued to rage on Thursday.Police have used tear gas to disperse the crowd, as interior ministry said at least 12 people have been arrested.American flags were also burned in Tunisia, outside the US embassy in the capital, Tunis.Police fired tear gas at demonstrators who shouted their opposition to the film, and chanted slogans against the US.A small crowd also burned an American flag in Gaza City where Hamas, the elected government there, has condemned the film.Despite the Egyptian government’s call for calm protesters chanted in the streets and fires burned.Innocence of Muslims, the film that mocked Muhammad, was allegedly produced in the US by a filmmaker with ties to Coptic Christian groups, and excerpted on YouTube with dubbing in Arabic.On Wednesday, about 200 demonstrators took part in protests in the Egyptian capital.They rallied into the night chanting "leave Egypt” but there was however no repeat of the previous day’s events when angry crowds climbed the walls of the complex and tore down an American flag, which they replaced briefly with a black, Islamist flag.YouTube accessMeanwhile, YouTube, the video website owned by Google Inc, has said it will not remove the film clip, but it has blocked access to it in those countries.The prosecutor-general said on Wednesday that four people were being questioned after Tuesday’s events.Nine Coptic Egyptian-Americans were also put on an airport watch list. They are believed to have contributed to the production of the anti-Islam film that led to the embassy protest.The man behind the protests told Al Jazeera he just wanted to combat insults against Islam through legal and peaceful means. Wesam Abdel Wareth, the protest organiser, said his group was not happy that young people who joined their protest brought down the US flag.He also said there was no co-ordination with protesters in Libya, and he condemned the violence there.On Tuesday, Egypt’s prestigious Al-Azhar mosque condemned a symbolic "trial” of the Prophet organised by a US group, including Terry Jones, a Christian pastor who triggered riots in Afghanistan in 2010 by threatening to burn the Quran.But it was not immediately clear whether the event sponsored by Jones also prompted the embassy events.