A Pakistani minister offered $100,000 on Saturday to anyone who kills
the maker of an online video which insults Islam, as sporadic protests
rumbled on across parts of the Muslim world.
“I announce today that this blasphemer, this sinner who has spoken
nonsense about the holy Prophet, anyone who murders him, I will reward
him with $100,000,” Railways Minister Ghulam Ahmad Bilour told a news
conference, to applause.
“I invite the Taliban brothers and the al Qaeda brothers to join me in this blessed mission.”
A spokesman for Pakistan’s prime minister said the government disassociated itself from the minister’s statement.
While many Muslim countries saw mostly peaceful protests on Friday,
fifteen people were killed in Pakistan during demonstrations over the
video.
People involved in the film, an amateurish 13-minute clip of which
was posted on YouTube, have said it was made by a 55-year-old California
man, Nakoula Basseley Nakoula.
Nakoula has not returned to his home in the Los Angeles suburb of
Cerritos since leaving voluntarily to be interviewed by federal
authorities. His family has since gone into hiding.
In the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka on Saturday, thousands of Islamist
activists clashed with police who used batons and teargas to clear an
unauthorised protest. In Kano, northern Nigeria’s biggest city, Shi’ite
Muslims burned American flags, but their protest passed off peacefully.
The demonstrations were less widespread than on Friday, but showed
anger still simmered around the world against the film and other insults
against Islam in the West, including cartoons published by a French
satirical magazine.
Showing continued nervousness among Western governments, German
Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle called on Muslim countries to protect
foreign embassies.
“The governments in host countries have the unconditional obligation
to protect foreign missions. If that doesn’t happen, we will
emphatically criticise that and if it still doesn’t happen it won’t go
without consequences,” he told the Welt am Sonntag newspaper on Sunday
Germany’s embassy in Sudan was stormed on Sept. 14 as was the U.S.
mission in the capital Khartoum where there were deadly clashes between
police and protesters against the film.
MILITIA OUSTED IN BENGHAZI
In the Libyan city of Benghazi, a crowd forced out an Islamist
militia some U.S. officials blame for a deadly attack on the U.S.
consulate during one of the first protests, on Sept. 11.
Ansar al-Sharia, which denies it was involved in the attack that
killed U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans,
quit the city after its base was stormed by Libyans angry at armed
groups that control parts of the country.
That might go some way to vindicate U.S. President Barack Obama’s
faith in Libya’s nascent democracy where Ambassador Christopher Stevens
had worked to help rebels oust Muammar Gaddafi only to be killed in a
surge of anti-Americanism.
“It’s the view of this administration that it’s a pretty clear sign
from the Libyan people that they’re not going to trade the tyranny of a
dictator for the tyranny of the mob,” said White House spokesman Josh
Earnest.
“It’s also an indication that the Libyan people are not comfortable
with the voices of a few extremists and those who advocate and
perpetrate violence, to drown out the voices and aspirations of the
Libyan people.”
In Egypt, the leader of Egypt’s main ultra orthodox Islamist party,
that shares power with the more moderate Muslim Brotherhood, said the
film and the French cartoons were part of a rise of anti-Islamic actions
since the Arab spring revolts.
“A new reality in the Middle East has emerged after the toppling of
autocratic regime of Hosni Mubarak and others through democratic
elections that brought newly-elected Islamist governments,” Emad Abdel
Ghaffour, leader of the Salafist Nour Party, told Reuters.
“There are interest groups who seek to escalate hatred to show
newly-elected governments and their Muslim electorate as undemocratic,”
he said.
Nour, whose party is the second largest in parliament and plays a
formidable force in Egypt’s new politics, said President Mohamed Mursi
should demand “legislation or a resolution to criminalise ”contempt of
Islam as a religion and its Prophet“ at the U.N. General Assembly next
week.