KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — Islamic militants
sought Tuesday to capitalize on anger over an anti-Islam video that was
produced in the United States, saying a suicide bombing that killed 12 people
in Afghanistan was revenge for the film and calling for attacks on U.S.
diplomats and facilities in North Africa.
The attempt by extremists across the region to
harness Muslim fury over a film that denigrates the Prophet Muhammad posed new
concern for the United States, whose embassies and consulates have been targeted,
and in some cases breached, during riots and protests over the past week.
At the same time, Western leaders welcomed
statements by Middle East governments that condemned the violence against
diplomatic facilities on their soil, even as they expressed anger over the
video. Some of those governments replaced autocratic regimes in popular
uprisings that swept the region, allowing for greater leniency toward protest.
At least 28 people have died in violence linked
to the film in seven countries, including U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens
and three other Americans killed in a Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. Consulate in
Benghazi, Libya. The toll also includes 12 protesters killed in riots over the
film last week.
Some officials in Libya have said the attack on
the consulate was planned in advance by militants. However, the White House
said Tuesday the assault appeared to have been sparked by anger over the film,
though the investigation continues.
The crisis has become a major foreign policy
challenge for Washington in the final weeks of a presidential election campaign
that has largely focused on economic challenges. The uproar over the video,
"Innocence of Muslims," which was made by an Egyptian-born American
citizen and posted on YouTube, reflects seemingly intractable tension between
Western principles of free speech and Islamic beliefs that brook no insult
directed at the prophet.
The crisis offered fresh impetus for Islamic
militants who have long plotted and carried out attacks on Western targets.
Tuesday's attack in Kabul, the Afghan capital,
was carried out by a suicide bomber who rammed a car packed with explosives
into a mini-bus carrying foreign aviation workers to the airport. At least 12
people died, including eight South Africans, three Afghans and a citizen of
Kyrgyzstan.
A spokesman for the Afghan militant group,
Hizb-i-Islami, claimed responsibility for the dawn attack and said it was
carried out by a 22-year-old woman named Fatima. Suicide bombings carried out
by women are extremely rare in Afghanistan, where few if any Afghan women drive
cars.
"The anti-Islam film hurt our religious
sentiments and we cannot tolerate it," spokesman Haroon Zarghoon told The
Associated Press. "There had been several young men who wanted to take
revenge, but Fatima also volunteered and we wanted to give a chance to a girl
... to tell the world we cannot ignore any anti-Islam attack."
Also, al-Qaida's branch in North Africa called
for attacks on U.S. diplomats and an escalation of protests against the
anti-Islam film. Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb praised the killing of Stevens
and urged Muslims to pull down and burn American flags at embassies, and kill
or expel American diplomats to "purge our land of their filth in revenge
for the honor of the Prophet."
In a statement, the group condemned the United
States for "lying to Muslims for more than 10 years, saying its war was
against terrorism and not Islam," and threatened attacks in Algeria,
Tunisia, Morocco and Mauritania.
Yemen-based al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula
recently issued a similar call for attacks on U.S. diplomatic facilities. It is
al-Qaida's most active branch in the Middle East.
In Tunisia, Foreign Minister Rafik Abdessalem
pledged to bring to justice those behind protests outside the U.S. Embassy in
Tunis that saw cars burned and classrooms at a nearby American school trashed
and looted.
"Violence is not tolerated, no matter
where it comes from, and can in no way be justified," he said. "We
will strictly enforce the law against those implicated in the ongoing
investigation."
Britain's foreign secretary, William Hague,
told Parliament's Foreign Affairs committee that the film was contemptible but
that it was no excuse for violence.
"I therefore welcome the clear
condemnation (of the violence) from leaders, including what are generally
termed Islamist leaders, across the region," he said. He characterized the
crisis as a difficult step in a democratic evolution that will last
generations.
In Pakistan, hundreds of angry protesters broke
through a barricade outside the U.S. Consulate in the northwest city of
Peshawar, sparking clashes with police that left several wounded on both sides,
said police officer Arif Khan.
In Kashmir's main city of Srinagar, a strike
shut down businesses and public transportation as marchers burned U.S. flags
and an effigy of President Barack Obama. Police fired tear gas and used batons
to disperse protesters, who hurled rocks at the troops, according to police.
In Indonesia, about 200 people from various
Islamic groups torched an American flag outside the U.S. Consulate in the city
of Medan. Some unfurled banners saying, "Go to hell America," while
others trampled on dozens of paper flags.
Also, 100 Muslim students in Makassar, in
central Indonesia, called for the death penalty against the filmmaker, Nakoula
Basseley Nakoula. Some 400 people protested peacefully outside the U.S. Embassy
in Bangkok, Thailand's capital.
The government in Bangladesh
blocked YouTube to prevent people from seeing the video. YouTube was also
inaccessible in Saudi Arabia after King Abdullah ordered the blocking of all
websites with access to the film. Google has blocked access to the video in
Libya, Egypt, Indonesia and India because it says the video broke laws in those
countries.
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