Cartoon protesters direct anger at US (AP) Updated: 2006-02-09 06:56
"We value and appreciate peaceful Islamic protests," said Abdul Aziz
al-Hakim. "But we are against the idea of attacking embassies and other official
sites."
In the West Bank, about 300 Palestinians overpowered a Palestinian police
detail and attacked an international observer mission in the city of Hebron.
Sixty members of the mission were inside, said Gunhild Forselv, spokeswoman
for the Temporary International Presence in Hebron. A few protesters forced
their way in, where unarmed observers waved clubs in an attempt to drive them
off. Police reinforcements eventually restored order.
Muslims also demonstrated in Indian-controlled Kashmir, Bangladesh,
Bosnia-Herzegovina, and in Turkey.
In Washington, President Bush condemned the deadly rioting sparked by
cartoons of the prophet Muhammad on Wednesday, and his secretary of state
accused Iran and Syria of trying "to inflame sentiments" across the Muslim
world.
Bush urged foreign leaders to halt the spreading violence and to protect
diplomats in besieged embassies.
The president spoke out about the controversy for the first time, signaling
deepening White House concern about violent protests stemming from the
publication of caricatures in Denmark's Jyllands-Posten and reprinted in
European media and elsewhere in the past week.
"We reject violence as a way to express discontent with what may be printed
in a free press," the president said.
At the same time, Bush admonished the press that its freedom comes with "the
responsibility to be thoughtful about others."
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