A file photo taken on May 19, 2011 shows Pakistani Federal Railways Minister Haji Ghulam Ahmed Bilour addressing the media in Amritsar. |
Pakistan official offers $100,000 reward for killing of maker of anti-Prophet Muhammad film
A
Pakistani government minister on Saturday announced a $100,000 bounty
for the killing of the person who produced an online film that
denigrates the Prophet Muhammad.
Federal
Minister for Railways Ghulam Ahmed Bilour also asked the Taliban and
al-Qaida to extend support to the would-be killer.
Speaking
at a press conference at the Peshawar Press Club, the federal
minister said whoever is responsible for blasphemy deserves death.
"The
American who produced the sacrilegious film in the U.S. is also
liable to death and we will shower dollars on the one who killed the
blasphemer. If members of the banned militant organizations kill the
maker of the blasphemous movie, they will also be rewarded,"
Bilour announced.
He
called for legislation to have the anti-blasphemy law at the global
level so that no one could hurt the religious emotions of the Muslims
in the name of the freedom of expression.
He
said the situation would remain tense until anti-blasphemy law was
enacted at the world level.
Bilour
condemned the work of the filmmaker, saying it distressed the Muslims
across the world. However, he also condemned the violence
during the protests on Friday, which was declared a national holiday
in honor of Muhammad, saying it could defame Muslims and their
religion.
Bilour
said the government had already announced that the police and other
law-enforcers would give protesters the opportunity to peacefully
condemn the filmmaker and would not crack down on them with batons.
At
least 15 people were killed and shops and businesses were damaged on
Friday during Muslim protests in Pakistan.
The
film in question, produced in the U.S. and posted on the Internet
under several titles including "Innocence of Muslims,"
portrays the prophet as a fraud, womanizer and child molester.
The
U.S. Embassy in Pakistan has run television spots, one featuring
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, saying the government had nothing
to do with the film.
Pakistan
had declared Friday a "Day of Love" for the Prophet and
Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf said an attack on Islam's founder
was "an attack on the whole 1.5 billion Muslims."
Dozens
of people, including the U.S. ambassador to Libya, have been killed
this month in violence linked to the film, which also has renewed
debate over freedom of expression in the U.S. and in Europe.
Protests
continued in the Muslim world on Saturday. Scores of people were
injured in clashes in Bangladesh's capital between police and
hundreds of demonstrators. In Pakistan, more than 1,500 people,
including women and children, rallied in the capital.
Thousands
of people also protested Saturday in Nigeria's largest city, Kano.
The crowd marched from a mosque to the palace of the Emir of Kano,
the region's top spiritual leader for Muslims.
About
200 students in Srinagar, the main city in Indian-controlled Kashmir,
chanted "Down with America" and "Long live Islam"
in a peaceful protest. Some carried a placard that read, "There
is no God but Allah and Muhammad is his messenger."
NBC's
Mushtaq Yusufzai in Pakistan and The Associated Press and Reuters
contributed to this story.
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