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NYTLONDON — Under pressure from American and British officials, YouTube on Wednesday removed from its site some of the hundreds of videos featuring calls to jihad by Anwar al-Awlaki, an American-born, Yemen-based cleric who has played an increasingly public role in inspiring violence directed at the West.
Last week, a British official pressed for the videos to be removed and a New York legislator, Anthony Weiner, sent YouTube a letter listing hundreds of videos featuring the cleric. The requests took on greater urgency after two powerful bombs hidden in air cargo planes were intercepted en route from Yemen to Chicago on Friday, with the prime suspect being the Yemen-based group Mr. Awlaki is affiliated with, Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.
In an e-mail, Victoria Grand, a YouTube spokeswoman, said that the site had removed videos that violated the site’s guidelines prohibiting “dangerous or illegal activities such as bomb-making, hate speech, and incitement to commit violent acts,” or came from accounts “registered by a member of a designated foreign terrorist organization,” or used to promote such a group’s interests.
Ms. Grand said that Google, YouTube’s owner, sought to balance freedom of expression with averting calls to violence. “These are difficult issues,” she wrote, “and material that is brought to our attention is reviewed carefully. We will continue to remove all content that incites violence according to our policies. Material of a purely religious nature will remain on the site.”
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http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/04/world/04britain.html?ref=world
YouTube yanks cleric's jihad sermon videos: NY Times(AFP) – 45 minutes ago
SAN FRANCISCO — YouTube has yanked videos featuring calls by Yemen-based radical Muslim cleric Anwar al-Awlaqi for a holy war, The New York Times reported.
The American-born Awlaqi has been cited as a catalyst for terrorist attacks and was charged Tuesday in absentia in Yemen with incitement to kill foreigners under the banner of Al-Qaeda. The move by Yemeni prosecutors came several days after parcel bombs destined for Chicago were traced to suspected jihadists in Yemen.
Removal of some of Awlaqi's hundreds of videos at YouTube follows complaints from American and British officials, according the Times.
US Congressman Anthony Weiner, a Democrat from New York, dubbed Awlaqi the "bin Laden of the Internet" in a letter sent last week demanding removal of the videos. "We are facilitating the recruitment of homegrown terror," Weiner said in a message posted at his website. There is no reason we should give killers like al-Awlaqi access to one of the world's largest bully pulpits so they can inspire more violent acts within our borders, or anywhere else in the world," he said.
Awlaqi, a citizen of both Yemen and the United States, has appeared in more than 700 YouTube videos that have logged a combined total of 3.5 million views, according to the congressman.
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