to “Innocence of Muslims” in a number of nations, including India, Egypt and Saudi Arabia, where it is deemed illegal. But Schmidt stressed that the video met YouTube’s basic criteria for material that can be posted, which is why it remains accessible in many countries.
“Google has a very clear view on this, which is that we believe the answer to bad speech is more speech,” he told reporters in the South Korean capital Seoul.
Violence triggered by the film, which mocks the Prophet Mohammed, has claimed around 50 lives, including that of the US ambassador to Libya.
“We obviously do not endorse the use of the video or these ideas . . . hatred or violence or anything, but we openly believe that the best answer to it is more speech, not the other way around,” Schmidt said.
“Some countries disagree. There are some places where we had to actually block access to that video,” he added.
Other countries, including Pakistan and Sudan, blocked the access themselves. Meanwhile, several hundred Muslims, many waving banners and shouting “execute people who mock Islam”, rallied outside the US embassy and Google offices in Bangkok yesterday to denounce the anti-Islam. The demonstration saw a brief scuffle as protesters tried to surge towards the United States embassy through lines of riot officers, but police said it passed largely peacefully with no one seriously injured. — AFP.
Former finance assistant in court over US$210 000 fraud
Yeukai Karengezeka-Chisepo Court Correspondent A former finance assistant has appeared in court facing fraud and money laundering charges involving more than US$210 000 allegedly misappropriated from two organisations. Nolan Burungudzi…



