Violent
protests in Kabul: Up to 1,000 Afghans rail against anti-Islamic film
Up
to 1,000 Afghans massed outside NATO and US military bases in Kabul
on Monday, setting fire to cars and storage containers in a violent
protest against the anti-Islamic film that has sparked outrage across
the Muslim world.
RT,
17
September, 2012
Some
40 to 50 police officers were reportedly injured in the
demonstrations. Members of the crowd opened fire on police, but no
one was wounded by the gunfire, police said. Police fired warning
shots in an attempt to disperse the protestors.
"We
have not shot back and we won't," police
chief Mohammad Ayoub Salangi said. Salangi was injured during the
protests.
The
protests took place around Jalalabad road, where the US and NATO army
bases are located. Western embassy personnel in the area are on
“lockdown” as the protests continue to build, Reuters reported.
Protesters
gathered at 6:30am local time in numbers estimated to range from
200-300 to upwards of 1,000. A contingent of riot police was deployed
at the US embassy, and columns of black smoke were witnessed at the
area of the clashes.
Firefighters
were dispatched to battle blazes caused by burning tires and cars,
and traveled to the scene on roads littered with rocks thrown by
protestors.
The
crowds chanted “Death
to America!” and “Death
to those people who have made a film and insulted our Prophet!”police
said.
Camp
Phoenix, a US military base in the area, reported that protesters
lobbed stones at the compound. "Police
drove them back from areas around the base," a
local police official named Hafiz told AFP.
Protesters
were not directly attacking Camp Phoenix, International Security
Assistance Force (ISAF) spokesperson Lieutenant Colonel Hagen Masser
told AFP: "We
heard that the demonstration could turn into something more violent.
But it's only in the vicinity of Camp Phoenix, so it's not an attack.
… We're monitoring the situation and we are ready. But it's the
task of the police."
Protests
in Kabul were mostly peaceful before Monday’s outbreak of violence.
"We
have received reports of protests in Kabul, including 200 – 300
demonstrators on Jalalabad Road. Full statement to be posted
soon,” the
US embassy in Kabul wrote on Twitter.
This
latest outbreak in the violent protests sweeping the Islamic world
came after Hassan Nasrallah, leader of the Lebanese political party
Hezbollah, called for a week of mass protests over the Islamophobic
film ‘Innocence of Muslims,’ which has sparked widespread uproar
among Muslims worldwide.
“We
should not only express our anger at an American embassy here or
there,”
Nasrallah said. He called on protesters to push their leaders to
express their anger, saying it is their “responsibility” to
ensure that the Koran, Muslim holy places and the Prophet Muhammad
are “respected” by
the United States and the world.
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