US powerless to act against anti-Islam inciters
US: As anti-American protests erupt in the Muslim world, the United
States is powerless to act against those who incited the violence due to
the freedoms enshrined in its cherished constitution.
The catalyst for the conflagration, which is spreading across the
Middle East and North Africa, was a privately-made film denigrating the
Prophet Mohammed linked to evangelical and Coptic Christians in the
United States.
The suspected producer is Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, a 55-year-old
Copt living in California. It was promoted on the websites of two other
Americans, extremist Christian pastor Terry Jones and another Copt,
Washington-based lawyer Morris Sadek.
“I know it is hard for some people to understand why the United
States cannot or does not just prevent these kinds of reprehensible
videos from ever seeing the light of day,” Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton said Thursday.
“Now, I would note that in today's world with today's technologies,
that is impossible. But even if it were possible, our country does have
a long tradition of free expression which is enshrined in our
constitution and our law, and we do not stop individual citizens from
expressing their views no matter how distasteful they may be.”
The Justice Department refused to be drawn on what avenues it may be
pursuing to punish Nakoula and others, but experts said there was
nothing they could do to restrict people from exercising their
constitutional rights. “The US government is powerless in the specific
sense that the constitution allows Americans to speak this way without
fear of being thrown in prison because some people find what they say
blasphemous,” professor Eugene Volokh, an expert on free speech law,
told AFP.
AFP
|