Friday, Sep 21, 2012 6:08 PM UTC
Trying to calm jangled nerves, the U.S. has begun airing ads condemning the film that rocked the Muslim world VIDEO
By Alexander Besant, GlobalPost
Topics: Barack Obama, Elections 2012, Hillary Clinton, Libya, Libya embassy attack, Pakistan, The Innocence of Muslims
(Credit: AP/Evan Vucci)
In an effort to calm frayed nerves after a week of protests, the U.S. aired advertisements on Pakistani television denouncing the amateur anti-Islam film “The Innocence of Muslims.”
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The film trailer has caused waves of protests at U.S. embassies around the Muslim world, including all over Pakistan, and has cost the life of the American ambassador to Libya, J. Christopher Stevens.
The violence has already claimed 30 other lives and scores have been injured, reported the Associated Press.
The United States also issued a travel warning for visitors to Pakistan, warning them about the volatile situation created by the video, GlobalPost reported.
The ads, featuring U.S. President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton denouncing the trailer, are an effort by the government to distance itself from the film and temper the fury it has caused.
“The United States had absolutely nothing to do with this video,” said Clinton in the ad, while going on to emphasize the importance of religious tolerance.
Many of the protestors have expressed anger at the U.S. government, believing that it had approved the film for release or had sponsored it, said the Los Angeles Times.
The State Department confirmed that it had made the $70,000, 30-second ad, which was aired on seven Pakistani television stations Thursday, said BBC News.
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Thursday, Sep 20, 2012 2:57 PM UTC
The anti-American furor that gripped Cairo last week says more about local political rivalries than anything else
By Erin Cunningham, GlobalPost
Topics: Cairo, Egypt, Egyptian Protests, Elections 2012, GlobalPost, Innocence of Muslims, Libya, Mohamed Morsi, Muslim Brotherhood
Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Sept. 15, 2012 after days of protests (Credit: AP/Khalil Hamra)
CAIRO, Egypt — The anti-American furor that gripped downtown Cairo last week may actually say more about local political rivalries than anyone’s views about the United States or Islam.
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It was Salafi-Islamist groups, more conservative than, and politically at odds with, the ruling Muslim Brotherhood, which made the first calls for protests outside the US Embassy in Cairo last week.
Since then, some of those same groups have openly pressured Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi, a longtime leader of the Brotherhood, to take a more hardline stance against the United States for “allowing” the anti-Islam film — which was used as a rallying point for the unrest — to be produced on its soil.
Morsi’s initial reluctance to condemn the storming at the US Embassy, which provoked the ire of the Obama administration, was largely viewed as a move to appease local, more extreme Islamic political groups.
Protesters outside the mission had chanted: “Morsi, Morsi, why are you silent? Isn’t this your prophet?”
Analysts say the amateur film, which denigrates the Prophet Muhammad, and subsequent melee, gave Salafis the opportunity to shore up their “Islamic” credentials vis-à-vis Morsi, who has sidelined the ultra-orthodox group in his new government.
The events could mark the start of a more fierce rivalry between the two political organizations over who speaks for Islam in Egypt, especially as parties gear up for fresh parliamentary elections later this year. Both the film and US-Egyptian relations may turnout to be a just side note in a local battle for power.
“Today, there is a lot more room for political forces to organize,” including the Islamists, political analyst at Al Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies, Ziad Akl, told GlobalPost last week.
“It tells you that there is a radical Islamist stream on the rise,” he said. If Morsi is tougher on the protesters and Muslim critics than he is on the film, “the state will be sucked into a mechanism of political compromise that does not give him any room to suppress radical movements.”
It was, in fact, a Salafi-supported television channel — Al Nas — that first aired the controversial video.
Whether the anchor — the polarizing Sheikh Khaled Abdullah — intended to put Morsi in a tight spot politically, where he would be forced to balance public opinion with international commitments to an unpopular United States, remains unclear.
But Salafi groups, already unhappy with Morsi for political reasons and which would seek the implementation of their interpretation of Islamic law, seized the occasion to push back and chide the president for not being the first to condemn the video.
Jama’a al-Islamiya is one such organization. A former terrorist group brought into the political fray, Jama’a announced several days before the protest that they were considering breaking their political alliance with the Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party because Jama’a delegates were left out of both ministerial appointments and positions on the National Human Rights Council.
Following the protest at the US Embassy, Jama’a officials first called on Morsi to cancel a planned visit to the United States, and then demanded he sever relations with the Obama administration entirely.
The Salafis will now challenge the Brotherhood at the polls by asking voters to decide, “Which is the more devout party, and which party is more likely to apply Sharia,” said Kamal Habib, a former Egyptian Jama’a leader who is now a political analyst.
“It will affect the Brotherhood negatively,” he said.
The Salafi Al Nour party, already dismayed at having been shut out of cabinet posts despite winning about 25 percent of the seats in a now-dissolved parliament, also hit back at the Brotherhood over the film.
In a recent post on their official Facebook page, Al Nour said that since being elected, Morsi had not officially communicated with or consulted with any of their officials.
“As Salafis, we feel he [Morsi] could do more to defend Islam,” said Sameh Abd Al Hamid, a member of the Al Nour party that backed the US Embassy protest, told GlobalPost. “I don’t think he should officially apologize [to the US].”
Al Nour members of the 100-member constituent assembly, which is drafting Egypt’s new constitution, are pushing hard to include an article that criminalizes blasphemy.
“We want Sharia [law] implemented and part of that includes not blaspheming God,” Al Hamid said.
If Morsi or the Brotherhood, also on the constituent assembly, hesitates throwing their weight behind a blasphemy clause, they run the risk of deepening an already growing rift between them and the Salafis.
“It’s true. Their politics,” Al Hamid said, referring to the Brotherhood, “are becoming increasingly more different than ours.”
Heba Habib contributed reporting from Cairo, Egypt.
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Wednesday, Sep 19, 2012 8:51 PM UTC
Cindy Lee Garcia claims she was unaware of Islamophobic message
By Associated Press, AP
Topics: Diplomacy, Egyptian Protests, Islam, Libya, Libya embassy attack, The Innocence of Muslims, Yemen
Indian policemen baton charge protesting Muslims, during a protest in front of the U.S. embassy in Chennai, India, Tuesday, Sept.18, 2012. The protest was held against an anti-Islam film called "Innocence of Muslims" that ridicules Islam's Prophet Muhammad.(AP Photo)(Credit: AP)
LOS ANGELES (AP) — An actress who appears in the anti-Muslim film that has sparked riots in the Middle East is suing the filmmaker for fraud and slander and Google to try to get the movie’s trailer removed online.
Cindy Lee Garcia’s lawsuit filed Wednesday in Los Angeles claims the actress was duped by Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, the man behind “Innocence of Muslims” who has been forced into hiding since its 14-minute trailer rose to prominence last week. She was unaware of the film’s anti-Muslim content and that the pages of the script she received had no mention of the prophet Muhammad, according to her complaint.
The lawsuit states Garcia responded to an ad and thought she was appearing in an ancient Egyptian adventure film that was altered to give it an anti-Islamic message.
“The film is vile and reprehensible,” Garcia’s attorney, M. Cris Armenta, wrote in the document.
“This lawsuit is not an attack on the First Amendment nor on the right of Americans to say what they think, but does request that the offending content be removed from the Internet,” the complaint states.
Garcia has received death threats since the trailer began drawing attention, and her suit states she no longer is able to visit her grandchildren as a result. It has also harmed her reputation and caused “shame, mortification, and hurt feelings,” the suit states.
An email sent to Google seeking comment was not immediately returned.
A man who answered the phone at the law offices of Steven Seiden, who represents Nakoula on any criminal repercussions he may face, declined comment. He said Seiden does not represent Nakoula, who is on probation for a bank fraud case in which he opened 600 fraudulent credit accounts, in civil matters.
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Wednesday, Sep 19, 2012 3:06 PM UTC
The violent furor linked to the movie offers a chance to deliver a telling message about freedom of speech
By Nivien Saleh, Pacific Standard
Topics: Barack Obama, Benghazi, California, Innocence of Muslims, Islam, Libya, muslim, Muslim Brotherhood
(Credit: Jillian Rayfield)
The current turmoil in the Muslim world that has unfolded over the YouTube video clip Innocence of Muslims offers the U.S. what educators call a “teachable moment:” an opportunity provided by circumstance to explain an idea that the audience might otherwise find abstract and irrelevant.
The idea is freedom of expression.
Several months ago, Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, a California producer posing as Israeli citizen Sam Bacile, produced, then posted on YouTube, a movie trailer meant to offend Muslims. Very likely, additional goals were to elicit violent reactions in the Middle East, portray President Obama as weak and force him into a confrontation with Islamists.
The trailer, which columnists have described as wooden, stilted, and cheap, goes out of its way to hit the nerves of Muslims. It calls Muhammad a bastard, depicts him as crawling around the legs of his wife Khadija and performing cunnilingus on her.
This clip violates Islam’s rule of not creating images – even complimentary ones – of the prophet. But more importantly, it portrays Muhammad as a fool, guided not by divine inspiration but the guile of a sexually manipulative wife. In the patriarchal societies of the Middle East, which view men as the rational protectors of irrational women, females as constant sources of seduction, and talk of sexuality as a taboo, this scene alone is highly offensive.
Analysts suggest that Libyan terrorist groups planned attacks against U.S. diplomats long in advance and simply used the Benghazi demonstrations to launch them. In other locations, commentators say, food insecurity created a fertile environment of anxiety and resentment, which radical Islamist agitators, in railing against Innocence of Muslims, have used to shore up their own political status. These explanations may be true; but they alone do not account for the personal outrage that has shaken U.S. outposts across the Muslim world. Citizens of Egypt, Libya, Sudan, Yemen, Algeria, Tunisia, Gaza, Lebanon, Jordan, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and even Indonesia are clearly upset. Why, they ask, do Americans insult God? When will the guilty be punished? When will the United States apologize?
The second question is easy to answer. Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, who in 2010 pled no contest to charges of bank fraud, will likely be penalized for accessing the Internet without permission from his probation officer and thus violating the terms of his probation. But the United States, while it may hold its nose when discussing the film, will not apologize for allowing Innocence of Muslims to be posted.
Without coming across as defensive, President Obama should take advantage of the fact that Muslims across the world are waiting for a statement. Rather than letting the crisis blow over, he ought to use the moment to explain the Constitution’s First Amendment and freedom of speech, a principle unfamiliar to societies of the Middle East and Southern Asia but at the heart of democracy.
In a public speech reminiscent of his Cairo address of June 2009, he might pay tribute to Ambassador Chris Stevens, a diplomat who supported the liberation of Libya, and three other casualties of the Benghazi attack, Sean Smith, Glen Doherty, and Tyrone Woods.
Then he might reiterate what Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said before, namely that both he and his leadership team find this video repulsive and offensive. He might add that the clip reflects the views of a very small segment of society. Americans – especially those who have never met a Muslim – may be uneasy with a faith that is unfamiliar to them. But 95 percent believe that the Qur’an ought to be treated with respect. Similarly, the overwhelming majority of citizens of the Muslim world respect diplomats’ right to life and safety.
Next, the president might explain why he will not prohibit the video: One of the fundamental rights that people on American soil have had for over 200 years – especially after the end of slavery – is freedom of speech, a freedom that can only be restricted or sanctioned under the narrowest of circumstances. Freedom of speech is the basis of democracy. It requires that even offensive language be protected, for only expansive protections will shield citizens from a government intent on eroding their privileges.
With the Arab Spring, citizens of Muslim societies have expressed their desire for a greater say in the affairs of their governments, for more democracy. But democracy is not available for free. It depends on participation and debate, and honest debate is only possible if the participants can express their views openly, without fear of ending up in jail. The best way to show all participants that they are safe in airing their views is to protect the speech even of those whom the majority considers outrageous. That is why in a democratic society no president can deprive citizens of their constitutional entitlement to expression, even if he wants to. Listening to offensive speech is the price citizens pay for democracy, and most do so willingly.
Those citizens who feel offended are, of course, entitled to speak back to the offender, even engage in nonviolent protests. The limits are reached when public or private property is destroyed, foreign embassies are stormed, people are harmed or killed.
Lastly, President Obama might state that Ambassador Chris Stevens stood for these very principles when he became a foreign service officer, and when he later urged the U.S. government to support the liberation of Libya.
President Obama has shown on numerous occasions that he is a talented orator with a great sense for cultural nuance. Now is the time to take advantage of this gift and to speak without appearing either meek to his American audience or condescending to his interlocutors overseas.
Many people in the Middle East and Southern Asia know, and therefore expect, strict penalties for insulting God, his divine revelations, or his prophets. In Kuwait, a 26-year old was recently sentenced to 10 years in prison for using Twitter to insult the prophet as well as the rulers of Saudi Arabia and Bahrain. In Saudi Arabia, judges sentenced an Australian to 500 lashes and a year in jail for engaging in blasphemy. This May, Pakistan suspended Twitter because of material the government deemed blasphemous. In Egypt, where a constitutional assembly is drawing up a new constitution, the framers are about to constitutionally criminalize blasphemy – a first in the nation’s modern history. We should not be surprised that residents of these societies demand the very penalties for the makers of Innocence of Muslims to which they are being treated.
Citizens of these nations do not appreciate how valuable freedom of speech is in protecting them from the very dictatorships Tunisians, Libyans, Egyptians, and Syrians have struggled so hard to overcome. But right now, they want to hear from the United States. If President Obama keeps his silence, this moment will become a memory of insult and murder. In fact, the seeds for this may already be germinating: In Egypt, an Islamist member of the Shura Council – part of the country’s legislature – announced that a group is forming that consists of young people from various Islamist persuasions. Its aim is “to defend the Prophet by producing documentaries about the history of Christianity and Judaism.” In other words, some of Egypt’s young Islamists believe that tit-for-tat, insult for insult, is the appropriate answer to Innocence of Muslims.
If, on the other hand, Obama speaks to the video and its consequences, explaining that listening to obscenity once in a while is the price that democrats are willing to pay for their ability to participate in the political process, he may be able to heal some of the injury to the American psyche from the killing of U.S. personnel. He also might succeed in convincing many of the 1.6 billion people in the Muslim world that even though the United States does not penalize offensive speech, it understands the injury that it can cause.
And in the process, he just might open a few minds to a truly revolutionary idea.
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Wednesday, Sep 19, 2012 2:40 PM UTC
Mitt took a significant hit for his remarks following the violence in Libya. What will "47 percent" bring? VIDEO
By Lizzy Tomei, GlobalPost
Topics: Barack Obama, Elections 2012, GlobalPost, Libya, Libya embassy attack, Mitt Romney, Mitt Romney gaffes
(Credit: AP/Charles Dharapak)
It’s been a rough week for the Romney campaign.
It began with the Republican presidential candidate’s ill-timed comments follwoing protests in Cairo and an attack on a US consultate that killed four Americans in Libya, criticizing the president’s administration for a statement it did not, technically, issue.
Most recently, the campaign has stumbled after the explosive release of secret videos showing Romney “not elegantly” dismissing the political importance of nearly half of the American populace.
Now, a poll confirms what we already suspected: these verbal missteps are costing Romney among potential voters.
A Tuesday Reuters/Ipsos online poll of 792 registered voters found that 40 percent of those surveyed felt “less favorably” toward the Republican presidential hopeful after he criticized President Barack Obama’s handling of the attacks in Libya. That compared with 26 percent of those surveyed who felt worse about Obama after hearing his comments about the violence, Reuters said.
“Romney probably did not do anything to shore up his foreign policy cred on this particular issue,” Reuters quoted Ipsos pollster Julia Clark as saying.
On Sept. 11, Romney criticized the Obama administration for its response to protests that culminated in the death of the US ambassador to Libya and three others. But the comments in question were in fact issued by the US Embassy in Cairo in response to protests there, in advance of the violent attacks in Libya. The adminstration’s actual response to the Libya attacks, released the following morning, strongly condemned the violence.
Tuesday’s poll also found that more voters surveyed has a positive response to Obama than to Romney. Some 37 percent of voters “felt more favorable toward Obama after hearing about his remarks,” Reuters said, while only 29 percent felt favorably toward Romney following his comments.
Romney has also been the subject of ridicule and criticism on social media for his comments at a fundraiser revealed in secretly-recorded video, published this week by Mother Jones. Watch an excerpt here, and see below for a compilation of tweets calling for a #RomneyEncore:
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Wednesday, Sep 19, 2012 12:18 PM UTC
Libya, Egypt, India and Indonesia already have no access to the video
By Abdullah Al-shihri, AP
Topics: Egypt, Egyptian Protests, Google, Islam, Libya, Libya embassy attack, Saudi Arabia, YouTube
Egyptian protesters clash with security forces near the U.S. embassy in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Sept. 14, 2012, as part of widespread anger across the Muslim world about a film ridiculing Islam's Prophet Muhammad. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)(Credit: AP)
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) — YouTube said Tuesday that it had blocked users in Saudi Arabia from viewing an anti-Islam video that has sparked protests across the Muslim world, after the kingdom’s press agency reported that the ruler had blocked all access to the film.
The online video sharing site said that it was preventing “Innocence of Muslims” from being seen on its site in Saudi Arabia after being notified by the government there that the clip is breaking the country’s laws.
Google Inc., YouTube’s owner, has blocked access to the video in Libya and Egypt following violence there, and in Indonesia and India because it says the video broke laws in those countries.
The Saudi Press Agency said that the kingdom had sent a request to Google to “veil” all links containing the video, which was produced in the United States and which ridicules the Prophet Muhammad.
The agency said King Abdullah had directed that all websites and links that accessed the video should be blocked. An Associated Press reporter in Saudi Arabia reported that the online video sharing site was inaccessible that evening.
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