| Pakistani forces seek to quell protests(AP)
 Updated: 2006-02-20 08:52
 
 But police fired tear gas and guns to chase off hundreds of stone-throwing 
protesters who tried to join the rally and then enter an enclave where most 
foreign embassies are. The three-hour clash left the street littered with rocks 
and spent tear gas shells. An Associated Press reporter saw two injured police, 
one bleeding from his head, and several injured protesters. 
 Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao said police used tear gas, but denied 
they fired guns. The private Geo TV network said officers fired rubber bullets. 
 Qazi Hussain Ahmad, a top leader of the hardline Islamic coalition, the 
Mutahida Majlis-e-Amal (United Action Forum), was confined to his Lahore 
residence and others were detained or told to stay at home, police said. 
 "These people could create problems of law and order," said Chaudhry Shafqaat 
Ahmed, chief investigator of the Lahore police. 
 In Karachi, Pakistan's largest city, police said 15,000 coalition supporters, 
most wearing white shrouds of mourning splashed with red paint to symbolize 
their willingness to die defending the prophet's honor, rallied peacefully. 
 Twelve-year-old Amar Ahmed joined the protest, carrying a sign reading, "O 
Allah, give me courage to kill the blasphemer." 
 Hundreds of Muslims burned a church in the southern city of Sukkur. No 
worshippers were inside at the time, but one person was hurt afterward when 
police fired tear gas. 
 Local police chief Akbar Arian said the riot was not sparked by the cartoons 
but by allegations that a local Christian had burned pages of Islam's holy book, 
the Quran — another sign of the heightened sectarian tensions in this 
overwhelmingly Muslim nation. 
 In Indonesia, about 400 people marched to the heavily fortified U.S. Embassy 
in central Jakarta behind a banner that read, "We are ready to attack the 
enemies of the prophet." 
 Brandishing wooden staves and lobbing stones, they tried to storm the gates. 
They also set fire to U.S. flags and a poster of President Bush, and smashed the 
windows of a guard outpost before dispersing after a few minutes. 
 The U.S. Embassy condemned the attack as "thuggery." 
 In Istanbul, tens of thousands joined a protest organized by the Islamic 
Felicity Party, whose leaders shouted over loudspeakers that the crowd 
symbolized the anger of the world's 1.5 billion Muslims and urged them to 
"resist oppression." Protesters chanted slogans against Denmark, Israel and the 
United States. 
 Ethem Erkovan, a 47-year-old participant who held a banner in one hand and 
his daughter in the other, accused Western nations of maligning Islam. "They are 
the ones who are trying to depict the expanding Islamic community as terrorists, 
though all we want is peace," he said. 
 
 
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