On May 10 and continuing the following week, many anti-American protests took place. In
Afghanistan, demonstrations that began in the eastern provinces and spread to
Kabul were reported to have caused at least seventeen deaths. The
United Nations, as a precautionary measure, withdrew all its foreign staff from
Jalalabad, where two of its guest houses were attacked, government buildings and shops were targeted, and the offices of two international aid groups were destroyed. Demonstrations also took place in
Palestine,
Egypt,
Sudan, Pakistan and
Indonesia, leading to the death of at least 15 people. White House press secretary
Scott McClellan said, "The report had real consequences, people have lost their lives. Our image abroad has been damaged." However, in a press release issued by the
United States Department of State on May 12, General
Richard Myers claimed that the
Newsweek story was not a chief cause of the riots: "He has been told that the Jalalabad, Afghanistan, rioting was related more to the ongoing political reconciliation process in Afghanistan than anything else." On May 27, thousands of demonstrators gathered in what
The New York Times referred to as "waves of protest" in Pakistan, Egypt, Indonesia, Bangladesh, and the Middle East, "mostly centered on Friday prayer gatherings". The
New York Times reported that U.S. flags were burned at some demonstrations, and that, although most of the protests were peaceful, overt calls for an "Islamic revolution" were loudly supported by the crowds in Pakistan, further complicating a difficult political situation for General Musharraf. A
Red Cross spokesperson Simon Schorno confirmed that U.S. personnel at
Camp X-Ray had displayed "disrespect" to the Quran, and that U.S. officials knew of this activity. Delegates from the International Committee of the Red Cross informed U.S. authorities, who took action to stop the alleged abuse, said Schorno. He declined to specify the nature of the incidents. The cousin of
Shehzad Tanweer, who participated in the
7 July 2005 London bombings, claimed that Tanweer's ideology was reinforced by allegations of Quran abuse, "incidents like desecration of the Koran" had "always been in his mind." ==Other news reports==