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India-Pakistan
Low turnout for anti-American protests in Pakistan
2003-01-03
Members of Pakistan's Islamic parties demonstrated Friday against possible U.S. military action against Iraq, but turnout was much smaller than organizers had hoped, officials said.
In Islamabad Friday, 400-500 people turned out for a demonstration by the Muttahida Majlis-e Amal, a coalition of Pakistan's religious parties that controls two provincial legislatures. The largest turnout was in the MMA stronghold of Peshawar, capital of Pakistan's North-West Frontier province, where about 8,000 people listened to speeches by leaders of the coalition's two largest parties. "An attack on Iraq by the United States would not only be an attack on the Iraqi people, it would be an attack on all Muslims of the world," said Maulana Fazl-ur Rahman, the leader of Pakistan's Jamiat-Ulema-Islam party. Pakistan's cooperation in the U.S.-led war on terrorism has angered the country's Islamic leaders, who want U.S. troops and investigators to leave. But attendance at Friday's demonstrations was much lower than for protests during the U.S.-led war in Afghanistan in late 2001.
So much for the feared Arab, er, Pakistan street
In Karachi, Pakistan's largest city, about 2,000 people showed up, officials said. In Rawalpindi, fewer than 1,000 people turned out.
Get a bigger mob than that for a good old-fashioned stoning
Anti-American sentiment in Pakistan has been aggravated by an incident along the Afghanistan border last weekend that left a U.S. soldier wounded. During that incident, a U.S. warplane dropped a 500-pound bomb on a building where the soldier's attacker -- who wore the uniform of Pakistan's border scouts -- was holed up. U.S. and Pakistani officials said the airstrike occurred inside Afghanistan, but Islamic parties in North-West Frontier's provincial assembly said the target struck was a religious school on the Pakistani side of the border. Lawmakers passed a resolution demanding Pakistan's federal government file a protest with U.S. officials over the incident. The man who shot the soldier was captured and is in Pakistani custody.
He'll be held for a while and quietly released, or shot, depending on who he is and what he knows.
Posted by:Steve

#4  The gung-ho jihadists that were bussed in to fight next to the Taliban were slaughtered in large numbers by our bombing campaign, then in the siege of Konduz. In the aftermath of the fall of Konduz they were shot like dogs in the street. Survivors were jugged and, in a quaint local custom - now, don't disapprove, because who are we to say that one set of customs is inferior to our own? - they were held for ransom. The ones Mom and Pop, back in Waziristan, couldn't bail out are still there, those that haven't kicked off because of the crowded conditions in the local calaboose. Very sad, really. Mary Robinson got quite worked up about it for a while, before having lunch.
Posted by: Fred   2003-01-04 00:39:01  

#3  Wonder whether it was raining...some of these folks are "fair weather Islamo-nutjobs"..."Khalil, skip it! We'll stay in and watch bootleg copies of 'Baywatch'!"
Posted by: JDB   2003-01-03 23:07:54  

#2  They're that sticky stuff that keeps getting stuck to the bottom of our guys boots.
Posted by: Steve   2003-01-03 13:25:50  

#1  The reallyl gung-ho Jihadists were bussed into Afghanistan to fight beside the Taliban. Wonder what happened to them?
Posted by: Bin Luddite   2003-01-03 13:14:33  

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