Film protesters set sights on US consulates

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Police used tear gas to disperse a crowd of more than 2,000 protesters trying to reach the US consulate in Peshawar on Tuesday, as fresh demonstrations erupted against an anti-Islam film that has garnered worldwide condemnation.
Protesters chanting anti-US slogans and burning the Stars and Stripes flag gathered outside the mission in Peshawar to vent their fury at the “Innocence of Muslims” film, which was made in America and is deemed insulting to Islam.
Around 2,000 people marched through Karachi towards the US consulate to protest against the film, which has triggered a week of deadly protests across the Muslim world.
Riot police with armored vehicles were deployed to block access to the consulate in Peshawar.
“We used tear gas shells and lobbed gas grenades because the protesters were trying to come closer to the sensitive area,” senior police officer Imtiaz Khan told AFP.
He said more than 1,000 police were on hand to block the road to the US consulate.
Addressing the crowd, local leader of the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) Shabbir Ahmed lashed out at the United States, demanding the Pakistani government expel the American ambassador and close its missions in Pakistan.
“We are ready to sacrifice our lives to uphold the dignity of our Prophet (PBUH),” he said. In Lahore, up to 900 people demonstrated near the US consulate, chanting “Obama is a dog” and “Death to the USA”. The protest came after a female suicide bomber killed 12 people in Kabul on Tuesday in an attack claimed by an insurgent group as revenge for the film.
The blast brought the total number killed in a week-long violent backlash against over the film to 30.
There have been furious protests outside US embassies and other American symbols in at least 20 countries, and the American ambassador to Libya and three other US diplomats in the North African country have been among those killed.
In Pakistan, two protesters died after demonstrating against the film in the northwest, close to the Afghan border, and outside the US consulate in Karachi.
Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan have all blocked access to YouTube, following the video-sharing website’s failure to take down the anti-Islam film.