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| Angry demonstrators set ablaze the Danish
embassy in Damascus. (Photo: AFP) |

DAMASCUS, Feb. 4 (Xinhuanet) -- Hundreds of Syrian
demonstrators stormed and set fire to the Danish Embassy in Damascus on Saturday
in a protest against cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammad which were first
published by a Danish newspaper.
Saturday's demonstration in front of the Danish
Embassy in downtown Damascus went on peacefully at first, but angry protestors
later stormed the embassy building and set it on fire, said witnesses.
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| Muslim demonstrators
burn a Norweigian flag in the West Bank town of Nablus where Muslims
during a protest against the countries who published cartoons representing
the Prophet Mohammed.
[AFP] | The protestors
chanted "God is Great" and burned the Danish flag and replaced it with another
flag reading "No God but Allah, Mohammad is His Prophet.
Fire engines and riot police rushed to the embassy
building, in front of which gathered hundreds of passers-by after the protestors
receded, said a Xinhua correspondent at the scene.
The facade of the building, which also houses the
Swedish and Chilean missions, were tarred and the first floor, where the Danish
Embassy is located, was destroyed and fumes can still be seen coming from the
ruins, the correspondent added.
It was not immediately clear whether any casualties
were caused, but the Danish Embassy was closed on Saturday.
Security measures were stepped up at foreign missions
in Damascus and more riot police, wearing white helmets and holding shields,
surrounded the U.S. embassy, only several kilometers away from the Danish
mission.
Some demonstrators marched in the main Mezza street,
causing a traffic jam there. They then pushed forward into the wealthy Eastern
Mezza Area, where resided many western missions.
Earlier this week, the Danish Embassy was reportedly
evacuated from an anonymous telephone bomb threat.
Embassy personnel returned to the building after an hour-long search by security
forces who failed to find any explosive device.
The cartoons were first published by the Danish
newspaper, Jyllands-Posten, last September and republished in Norway last month
and then in some other European newspapers.
One of the cartoons depicts the prophet wearing a
turban shaped like a bomb.
Damascus has recalled its ambassador from Denmark for
consultation over the matter, the official SANA news agency reported on
Wednesday.
Earlier this week, the Syrian Foreign Ministry
condemned the cartoons as an offense to Muslims and Arabs and demanded the
Danish government punish the offending paper.
The Danish ambassador to Syria met late Thursday with
Syria's grand mufti Sheikh Ahmed Badr al-Dean Hassoun and conveyed Denmark's
apology for the offense caused by the cartoons.
SANA quoted the Danish ambassador as saying that the
majority of the Danes were very sorry for this situation which the newspaper has
put them into.
According to Islamic tradition, realistic depict ions
of prophets were prohibited and caricatures of them were considered profane.
Enditem
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