Pakistani
police charge at demonstrators during a protest against an anti-Islam
film in Peshawar on Sept. 21. At least 12 people died and nearly 200
were wounded in Pakistan during violent protests condemning a US-made
film insulting Islam, defying a government call for only peaceful
demonstrations, officials said.
A
general view shows policemen facing protesters during a protest against
the anti-Islam movie entitled 'Innocence of Muslims' made in the US, in
Peshawar, Pakistan, on Sept. 21.
A
Pakistani Muslim demonstrator carries material inside a burning cinema
during a protest against an anti-Islam film in Peshawar on Sept. 21.
Smoke
rises from a building which was set on fire by a mob during a protest
against the anti-Islam movie entitled 'Innocence of Muslims' made in the
US, in Karachi, Pakistan, on Sept. 21.
NBC News reported that 12 people died in Karachi with another three deaths in Peshawar during the protests. More than 100 people were injured.
Friday had been declared a national holiday by Pakistan's government so people could rally against the video.
There were also protests in at least half a dozen other countries, with American flags and effigies of President Barack Obama burned.
A
Pakistani riot police officer reacts to tear gas fired by other
officers during clashes with protestors after they tried to approach the
U.S. embassy, in Islamabad, Pakistan, on Sept. 21. Pakistani police
opened fire on rioters who were torching a cinema during a protest
against an anti-Islam film Friday, and security forces clashed with
demonstrators in several other cities in Pakistan on a holiday declared
by the government so people could rally against the video. Thousands of
people protested in several other countries, some of them burning
American flags and effigies of President Barack Obama.
A protester carries a representation of a U.S. flag as police vehicles burn in Karachi, Pakistan on Sept 21.
A
wounded Pakistani protester is helped by others during clashes with
riot police that erupted as protestors tried to approach the U.S.
embassy, in Islamabad, Pakistan, on Sept. 21.
Pakistani
Muslim demonstrators topple a freight container, placed by police to
block a street during a protest against an anti-Islam film in Lahore on
Sept. 21. At least 13 people died and nearly 200 were wounded in
Pakistan during violent protests on Friday condemning a US-made film
insulting Islam, defying a government call for only peaceful
demonstrations, officials said.
Protests ignited by a controversial film that ridicules Islam's Prophet Muhammad spread throughout Muslim world.
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