Protesters torch Danish mission in Beirut (AP) Updated: 2006-02-06 06:52
Muslim rage over caricatures of the prophet Muhammad grew increasingly
violent Sunday as thousands of rampaging protesters — undaunted by tear gas and
water cannons — torched the Danish mission and ransacked a Christian
neighborhood. At least one person reportedly died and about 200 were detained,
officials said.
Muslim clerics denounced the violence, with some wading into the mobs trying
to stop them. Copenhagen ordered Danes to leave the country or stay indoors in
the second day of attacks on its diplomatic outposts in the Middle East.
In Beirut, a day after violent protests in neighboring Syria, the
thousands-strong crowd broke through a cordon of troops and police that had
encircled the embassy. Security forces fired tear gas and loosed their weapons
into the air to stop the onslaught.
The protesters, armed with stones and sticks, seized fire engines, overturned
police vehicles and garbage containers for use as barricades, damaged cars and
threw stones at a Maronite Catholic church in the wealthy Ashrafieh area — a
Christian neighborhood where the Danish Embassy is located.
Flames and smoke billowed from the 10-story building, which also houses the
Austrian Embassy and the residence of Slovakia's consul.
Protesters waved green and black Islamic flags from the broken windows of the
building and tossed papers and filing cabinets outside.
Witnesses said one protester, apparently overcome by smoke, jumped from a
window of the embassy and was rushed unconscious to hospital. Security officials
said he died.
Thirty people were injured, half of them members of the security forces,
officials said, making it the most violent in a string of demonstrations across
the Muslim world. All the injuries were from beatings and stones.
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