Mindanao, Muslim leaders appeal for calm over anti-Islam film
The President of the Conference of Ulema urges people not to get carried away by "troublemakers". Violence, he adds, "is contrary" to the dictates "of the holy prophet" Mohammed. Muslim scholar calls for a joint effort because "Christians and Muslims can co-exist" in peace.

Manila (AsiaNews) - Elders and Muslim religious leaders, are appealing to the Muslim community in Mindanao and in the Philippines, inviting the faithful to remain calm. The warning follows a wave of protests against the anti-Islam film that has sparked attacks on U.S. embassies in the world and demonstrations in many Arab and Muslim majority nations, with dozens of deaths and injuries. Sheihk Jamal Munib, president of the National Ulema Conference of the Philippines (Nucp), based in Zamboanga, warns the people, lest they be drawn in by "agitators", who exploit the legitimate protests - called a "religious duty" - to foment "violence [...] contrary to the personality, behavior and style of the Holy Prophet [Muhammad]."

The appeal by the Muslim leaders was brought to AsiaNews' attention by the Muslim-Christian Silsilah movement, active in the southern Philippines since 1986 and advocate of dialogue between the government and Islamic rebels of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF). The movement is focusing particular attention on the anti-Islamic film, for its profanity, provocative content and that reactions that it has produced. To stop the violence, the leaders of Silsilah are promoting "constructive thinking" to find new ways of forging peace and dialogue together.

In this context, the conference is part of the Al-Ma'had Moro Islamie Institute, where the Islamic leader Sheihk Jamal Munib not only treated the issue of attacks triggered by the film "Innocence of Muslims," ​​considered blasphemous to the Prophet. He also called for a joint effort to press civil leaders to build a just and humane society, "where Christians and Muslims can co-exist" in peace.

To "avenge" the broadcast of the film that offends the figure of Muhammad, on 11 September, an armed group attacked the U.S. consulate in Benghazi (Libya). In the attack, Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three of his co-workers lost their lives. The protest against the film has since spread to other Muslim countries in the Middle East and North Africa, as well as in India, Pakistan and Indonesia, the most populous Muslim country in the world.