Protests are being held in cities across Pakistan against an Internet video that demonstrators say insults Muhammad.
The Pakistani television station, ARY, said one of its employees was killed Friday in the northeastern city of Peshawar after police opened fire on protesters who torched a cinema. At least 11 people were wounded in the violence. Another protester died from the inhalation of smoke from the US Flags they had burned.
Clashes between police and protesters also occurred in the capital, Islamabad, and in Lahore and Karachi.
In Lahore, Pakistani protesters threw shoes at posters denouncing the United States, Britain, Israel, and author Salman Rushdie in front of the Punjab Provincial Assembly.
Pakistan's government designated Friday to be a national holiday and “a day of love for the Prophet Muhammad,” with police urging demonstrators to protest peacefully.
Protests denouncing the video also took place in India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Iraq.
U.S. embassies across the Islamic world remain on high alert for protests connected with Friday prayers, where Islamist mullahs often call for violence and work followers into a frenzy.
U.S. diplomat Richard Hoagland met Friday with officials at Pakistan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs to discuss the controversial video. Hoagland reiterated U.S. condemnation of the video and emphasized the U.S. government had nothing to do with it. He said the video does not reflect the values of the United States.
Pakistani media said the government called on the army to protect Islamabad's diplomatic enclave, where 15,000 people were expected to march.
Cell phone service was blocked in 15 Pakistani cities, including Islamabad and the eastern city of Lahore.
The low-budget Internet video was produced by an Egypitan Coptic refugee in California. It was first used as an excuse for attacks on the US Embassy in Cairo and US Consulate in Benghazi, Libya on 9/11/12, where U.S. Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other embassy personnel were killed. Both attacks have al-Qaeda fingerprints involved in the planning. Since then, anti-U.S. protests have spread as far as Indonesia and the Egyptian government has issued warrants for multiple Egyptian Copts and Americans for "blasphemy."
The U.S. embassy in Pakistan is airing a public service advertisement on Pakistani television that features President Barack Obama denouncing the video.
Pakistani Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf told a conference of religious leaders and politicians in Islamabad that Pakistan is demanding the United Nations and other international organizations seek a law that bans “such hate speech, equal to the worst kind of anti-Semitism or other kinds of bigotry.”
The French news agency says police in Paris have banned two anti-U.S. protests planned for Saturday.
The French weekly Charlie Hebdo featured several images of the Prophet Muhammad in its Wednesday issue, including several of him naked.
The French government announced it is closing its embassies, consulates, cultural centers and schools in 20 countries Friday as a precautionary measure.