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Protesters: We'll join al-Qaeda
20/02/2006 19:30  - (SA)  

  • Saudis run Danish apology
  • Anti-cartoon protest banned
  • Troops 'seal off' Islamabad
  • Cartoon riots spark curfew
  • London: 10 000 protest cartoons
  • 'T-shirt stoked Muslim anger'
  • Kill the cartoonist, get a car
  • Cartoons: Freedom has 'limits'
  • Danes say apology 'pointless'
  • Jalalabad - Hundreds of Afghans shouted support on Monday for Osama bin Laden and threatened to join al-Qaeda during a protest against cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, while Pakistan Islamists vowed to broaden their campaign.

    In an attempt to cool the controversy, Pope Benedict said the world's religions and their symbols had to be respected.

    The student protest against the cartoons in the eastern Afghan city of Jalalabad passed peacefully in contrast to a weekend of deadly rioting in several countries, including Nigeria, where 28 people were killed, and Libya where 11 died.

    Two weeks ago in Afghanistan, at least 10 people were killed in several days of protests over the cartoons but the demonstrations largely petered out after that.

    On Monday, students gathered in the campus of the university in Jalalabad chanting "Death to Denmark", "Death to America" and "Death to France", a witness said.

    They also chanted "Death to Karzai" and demanded President Hamid Karzai close the embassies of Denmark, the United States and France and expel their forces from Afghanistan.

    "If they abuse the Prophet of Islam again we will all become al-Qaeda," the students shouted.

    Cartoons first published in a Danish newspaper last year and reprinted in European papers have sparked worldwide protests by Muslims who believe it is blasphemous to depict the Prophet.

    In the deadliest protests, at least 28 people died in riots in two Muslim states in northern Nigeria at the weekend.

    A Red Cross official said on Monday the death toll from the riots in Maiduguri, where 21 people were killed, could rise further as some of the 207 people hurt were in critical condition.

    Troops patrolled the capital of the northeastern state of Borno to prevent further violence.

    About a dozen churches, 200 shops, 50 houses and 100 vehicles were razed or vandalised by protesters in Maiduguri who ran wild after police fired teargas to disperse them.

    More Pakistan protests

    Pakistan's main Islamist alliance, the Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal (MMA), said on Monday it would broaden its campaign.

    Five people died in protests in Pakistan last week.

    Qazi Hussain Ahmed, president of the MMA, was held under house arrest in Lahore at the weekend to prevent him leading a rally in the capital Islamabad on Sunday.

    Last week, a Pakistani Muslim cleric and his followers offered rewards amounting to over $1m for anyone who killed Danish cartoonists who drew the Prophet caricatures.

    Denmark and Norway on Monday condemned the bounty.

    "It's murder and murder is also forbidden by the Qur'an," said Danish foreign minister Per Stig Moeller.

    Iran, where protesters have thrown stones, firecrackers and petrol bombs at Western embassies, denied US accusations that it has deliberately stoked Muslim anger at the cartoons.

    "We do not support any violence," foreign minister Manouchehr Mottaki said in Brussels.

    "We have to try our best to avoid any violence and this is what we are doing in Iran.

    "So many of our police were attacked by angry people in the streets," Mottaki said.

     
     



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