WASHINGTON, Sept 13: The US military chief, Gen Martin Dempsey, has
telephoned a Florida pastor, Terry Jones, urging him to withdraw his
support for a hate film which has stirred violent protests across the
Muslim world.
`This was a brief call in which Gen Dempsey
expressed his concerns over the nature of the film, the tensions it
could inflame, and the violence it could cause,` a senior US official
told a briefing in Washington.
In his call to Mr Jones on
Wednesday, Gen Dempsey also asked him `to consider withdrawing his
support for the film, Mr Jones did hear the general`s concerns, but he
was non-committal, the official added.
Mr Jones is known in the Muslim world as the pastor who organised a group burning of Islamic books two years ago.
Meanwhile,
investigations by US media outlets, and Dawn, revealed that the
producers drastically altered the film after it was made, turning it
into ahate message against Islam and the Muslims.
The original film was not about Islam or the Prophet (PBUH), but about a man called George who lived 2,000 years ago.
The
film `Innocence of Muslims` stirred violent protests in several Muslim
countries and in Libya it led to the death of US Ambassador Chris
Stevens and three of his colleagues.
Actors who participated in
the film told various media outlets that the producers hid their real
intentions from them. Some actors showed copies of the original script
which clearly identified the main character as George.
Cindy Lee
Garcia, an actress from Bakersfield, California, told a website called
Gawker that the script she was given was titled simply Desert Warriors.
`It
was going to be a film based on how things were 2,000 years ago,` she
said. `It wasn`t based on anything to do with religion. It was just on
how things were run in Egypt. There wasn`t anything about Prophet
Muhammad(PBUH) or Muslims or anything, she said.
Watching the
14-minute trailer posted on Youtube also makes it clear that defamatory
contents were added later, using a technique called voice over, which is
used for suppressing the original voice and replacing it with someone
else`s.
The violent reaction also caused a media frenzy in the
United States where a number of journalists are now trying to determine
who made this film, what was their intention and, above all, who posted
its Arabic version on the internet.
Bacile or Nakoura: Initially,
a man who identified himself as Sam Bacile, an Israeli Jew, claimed he
produced the controversial film. But investigations showed that Sam
Bacile was a fictitious character.
Investigations by the
Associated Press news agency concluded that Sam Bacile does not exist,
but is a persona used by a convicted Coptic Egyptian fraudster,Nakoula
Bassely Nakoula.
On Thursday morning, a US lawenforcement official confirmed that Nakoula was behind the anti-Muslim film.
US
federal court papers filed in a 2010 criminal prosecution against him
said Nakoula had used numerous aliases in the past, including Nicola
Bacily and Erwin Salameh.Nakoula pleaded no contest in 2010 to federal
bank fraud charges in California and was ordered to pay more than
$790,000 in restitution.
He was also sentenced to 21 months in
federal prison and ordered not to use computers or the Internet for five
years without approval from his probation officer.
Nakoula had
Coptic and evangelical associates in the shooting of the film, including
Steve Klein, an extremist Christian, who has helped train paramilitary
militias at a California church. He also conducts protests outside
abortion clinics, Mormon temples and mosques.
Bacile claimed
raising $5 million forthe film but investigations showed that it was a
low budget film and some of the actors were not even paid.
Investigations
also revealed that the film was never screened anywhere in America,
although Bacile claimed showing it in a virtually empty auditorium in
Hollywood.
However, the man who apparently started the riots in the Arab world is another Egyptian Coptic, Morris Sadek.
He helped translate the film into Arabic and also forwarded the Arabic version to various Egyptian television channels.
He also promoted the film on his Website.
Besides
the motives and true origin of the producers, the US media is also
asking questions about the timing of this hate project.
There are
also questions about the execution of the attack on the US Consulate in
Benghazi, Libya. US officials told reporters they believed it was not a
mob attack but a planned assault by an armed group.
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