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  • 12
    Sep
    2012
    3:11pm, EDT

    US Muslims wary of possible retaliatory attacks

    Leaders with The Council on American-Islamic Relations condemn the killings of the U.S. ambassador to Libya and three other diplomats. Watch their comments.

    By Jim Gold, NBC News

    Updated at 6:30 p.m ET: U.S. Muslims are seeing a spike in hate calls and are concerned about possible retaliatory attacks on domestic mosques following the fatal attack on the U.S. consulate in Libya and protests at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo.

    “We’re starting to get hate calls and we’d already seen a wave of anti-Muslim incidents,” Ibrahim Hooper, spokesman for the Council on Arab-Islamic Relations in Washington, D.C., told NBC News on Wednesday.


    “Our first thought is condemning the attacks. Obviously this is something we’re concerned about,” he said. Muslims are feeling insecure, he added.

    Follow live developments from Libya on BreakingNews.com

    The Muslim civil rights group later Wednesday held a news conference to condemn the attacks in Libya and Egypt.

    Libyan Ambassador to the United States Ali Suleiman Aujali holds a news conference along with leading American Muslims and other faith leaders. He is expected to condemn the murder of Ambassador Christopher Stevens at an American consulate in Libya.

    The U.S. ambassador to Libya and three embassy staffers were killed in the assault on the Benghazi consulate, which was stormed by Islamist gunmen. Another assault was mounted on the U.S. Embassy in Cairo.

    On Tuesday, CAIR issued a statement urging Muslims to ignore the distribution of what it called the “trashy” anti-Islam film blamed by some for the attacks.

    US won't rule out Islamist militant link to attack on US consulate in Libya

    Nihad Awad, executive director of CAIR, said:

    "We urge that this ignorant attempt to provoke the religious feelings of Muslims in the Arabic-speaking world be ignored and that its extremist producers not be given the cheap publicity they so desperately seek. Those who created this trashy film do not represent the people of America or the Christian faith. The only proper response to intentional provocations such as this film is to redouble efforts to promote mutual understanding between faiths and to marginalize extremists of all stripes.”

    President Obama, alongside Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, condemns "in the strongest terms" the "outrageous and shocking attack" that claimed the lives of Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans at the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya.

    On Wednesday, Awad said CAIR condemns the attacks in Libya and Cairo: "The actions of the attackers are totally inexcusable and un-Islamic."

    An FBI spokesperson told NBC News on Wednesday that the agency has extensive nationwide community outreach through special agents and field offices to local Muslim communities.

    Ambassador Stevens was 'courageous and exemplary,' Obama says

    “We encourage anyone who thinks they are being threatened or intimated to contact us or law enforcement right away,” the FBI said.

    In Rutherford County, Tenn., where the Islamic Center for Murfreesboro went through threats, attacks and a court fight to open last month, the sheriff’s office said on Wednesday it was unaware of any threats or protests following the Libya and Egypt attacks.

    NBC's Brian Mooar reports on the reactions from President Obama, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and GOP presidential hopeful Mitt Romney to the attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya, that lead to the murders of Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans .

    “We will respond to protect the Islamic Center,” sheriff’s spokesperson Lisa Marchesoni told NBC News.

    Ossama Bahloul, the center's imam, told NBC News, that the center will continue to pay the overwhelming cost of security to protect the center "due to the past history of violence and threats that have been aimed at The Islamic Center of Murfreesboro along with the current concerns."

    Bahloul also said the center "condemns in the strongest possible words" the killings in Libya and attack in Cairo.

    The New York Police Department told NBC News that there was no new threat, but as a precaution it would ramp up security at numerous religious institutions, including Coptic Christian churches, synagogues and mosques.

    Rep. Mike Rogers talks about the death of Ambassador Chris Stevens, Mitt Romney's comments on the situation and Libya and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu feeling snubbed by President Barack Obama.

    Romney slams Obama over attacks on US officials in Libya, Egypt

    On Aug. 6, a mosque in Joplin, Mo., was burned to the ground. The same mosque was the subject of an attemped arson a month earlier.

    In France, vandals smeared human feces on the doors of a mosque in Limoges sometime between Tuesday night and early Wednesday morning. There was no immediate indication, however, that the desecration was linked to the unrest over the film. The doors were daubed with neo-Nazi graffiti in July, news agencies said.

    Hassan Shibly, executive director of the Florida Council on American Islamic Relations in Tampa, Fla., said if an attack on a mosque occurred it would be hard to know who would be retaliating against what.

    “When somebody knocks on my door at CAIR, I just hope I don’t hear a gunshot," Shibly told NBC News. "There are a lot of crazies out there promoting hate.”

    NBCNewYork.com's Jonathan Dienst and NBC News' Kari Huus and Jeff Black contributed to this article.

    Related stories:

    • Attacks on mosques prompt security concerns
    • FBI offers reward for mosque arsonist

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    554 comments

    Muslims complaining about "other" people promoting hate. That's rich.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: libya, egypt, islam, embassy, cairo, featured, muhammad, tripoli, benghazi
  • 25
    Nov
    2011
    11:56am, EST

    American filmmaker Jehane Noujaim tells of Cairo arrest ordeal

    Jehane Noujaim, an American-Egyptian filmmaker, has been released by Egyptian authorities after being arrested while covering protests in Cairo's Tahrir Square. NBC News spoke with her following her release.

    By Cheryll Simpson, NBC News

    CAIRO, Egypt — An American filmmaker and journalist told Friday how she was arrested and accused of throwing Molotov cocktails by the Egyptian security forces as she fled from clouds of tear gas.

    Jehane Noujaim, an award-winning filmmaker best-known for her al-Jazeera TV documentary "Control Room," was seized by security forces while documenting clashes in Cairo's Tahrir Square.

    She was detained in the city's Tora prison for 36 hours without a phone and her camera was confiscated, Noujaim said in an interview with NBC News.

    Noujaim, who is of Egyptian descent, was not physically harmed during her detention — in contrast to fellow American-Egyptian activist Mona Eltahawy, who told msnbc.com on Thursday that riot police beat her, sexually assaulted her and dragged her by her hair.


    She was near Tahrir Square on Wednesday evening to record events because she has been making a film over the past 10 months about the country's revolution and the role of activists in the now-famous street.

    "With tear gas everywhere, myself and my crew got separated from each other. I was just trying to basically get out of the area because the tear gas is incredibly strong," she said.

    • Egypt protesters stage 'last chance' freedom march

    "I ran into then one military guy ... my camera got taken, my eyepiece got broken by him, he called me a spy; whereas the rest of the military had been very helpful in getting us out of the situation, this particular military guy was absolutely not," she said.

    Noujaim said it was many hours after her arrest before she was told the reason she had been detained.

    After days of deadly clashes between security forces and protestors, a shaky truce seems to be sticking, but despite mounting pressure, the military says it will maintain in power until Monday's long-awaited parliamentary elections. Ayman Mohyeldin reports from Cairo.

    "My charge was throwing Molotov cocktails and destroying public property," she said. "If I throw a rock I'd hit the back of the head of the protester in front of me ... that claim was so ridiculous, yet I was in prison for 36 hours because of it."

    "If that happens to me, imagine what happens to a kid who gets picked up off the street who doesn't have all of these connections," she added.

    "We were taken to Tora prison in one of these big blue trucks driven there and back again. Our phones were gone at this point so we weren't able to contact anybody," she said.

    Hope for future
    Despite her ordeal, Noujaim spoke of her belief that Egypt would soon have "systems of law" in place.

    "These changes take time and I don't want to put this gigantic blame on the poor kids in the police or the poor kids in the army," she said.

    "My hope is that ... people all around Egypt will soon be able to have systems of law in place, which really do protect their rights because before human rights are dealt with, before these systems of law are in place, it's very difficult to talk about democracy and politics and who one should vote for," she said.

    Noujaim said the experience of being involved in the Tahrir Square protests was "indescribable."

    "I don't want to say that Tahrir represents the entire country, but it does represent the hopes and the dreams of so many people in the country," she said.

    "What does it accomplish, it's people out there saying that things still need to change and it's a beautiful incredible energy when you're there and you're listening to people that are willing to do whatever it takes to change the mentality and to change the systems in the country."

    Edited by msnbc.com's Alastair Jamieson

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: egypt, cairo, tahrir
  • 24
    Nov
    2011
    7:32am, EST

    US citizen Mona Eltahawy: I was sexually assaulted by Egypt police

    Government and military officials in Egypt held a press conference to address the deteriorating security situation amid violent and deadly protests. Ayman Mohyeldin reports from Cairo.

    By Msnbc.com staff, NBC News and The Associated Press

    Updated at 11 a.m. ET

    An Egyptian-American columnist and activist told msnbc.com Thursday that she was sexually assaulted and beaten by police after being arrested in Cairo.

    Speaking after her release following hours of questioning, Mona Eltahawy said her right hand and left arm were broken on Wednesday night by riot police who dragged her by the hair and groped her between the legs.

    "They acted like animals," she told msnbc.com in a telephone interview. "I was filming the protests with my camera phone on Mohammed Mahmoud Street when they surrounded me and pulled me away."

    Eltahawy posted on her Twitter account that her right hand was "so swollen I can't close it."


     

    She posted a picture of her hand and tweeted that she was being taken to hospital.

    She alleged at least one officer stuck his hand down her jeans, adding: "I managed to stop him before he touched my genitals. They touched me all over, groped every part of my body and called me names, called me a whore."

    The claims by the Egyptian-born activist, who holds dual citizenship, could not immediately be verified.

    She told msnbc.com she had been held for several hours being questioned by the Interior Ministry and Military Intelligence officials before being released early on Thursday.

    "I think when they realised I had dual citizenship they were aware they had to be more careful," she said. "Eventually they apologized for the police behaviour and sent me home in a taxi."

    "They even gave me 50 [Egyptian] pounds for the fare. The journey was only 18 pounds but I gave the driver the whole lot because I just wanted nothing to do with their money," she added.

    Earlier she had posted on Twitter: "The dogs of the CSF (Central Security Force) subjected me to the worst sexual assault ever."

    The latest news on protests in Egypt

    According to her blog, Eltahawy spoke in May at the Oslo Freedom Forum about the power of censorship.

    Camera seized
    An American filmmaker and journalist, Jehane Nojaim, was also arrested by Egyptian police while documenting clashes in Tahrir Square, she told a colleague, Karim Amer, by phone.

    Nojaim is an award-winning filmmaker of Egyptian ancestry who is best-known for her Al-Jazeera TV documentary "Control Room."

    Amer said Nojaim was detained and her camera was confiscated. Amer said he was separated from her after they both fled from tear gas being fired by authorities.

    The U.S. Department of State tweeted early Thursday that it was aware of the reports that Nojaim and Elthawy had been arrested and said the U.S. Embassy in Cairo was "engaging authorities." 

    By Ian Johnston and Alastair Jamieson at msnbc.com, NBC news and the Associated Press

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: egypt, cairo, sexual-assault, mona-eltahawy, jehane-nojaim

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