Lawyers, union members, traders and journalists marched up to the heavily guarded diplomatic enclave to deliver a petition to the US embassy. Only a delegation was allowed to proceed inside to the US embassy.
"It is time to say 'no more instead of do more', No to American terrorism, long live Pakistan, long live the Pakistan army, go Americans go, death to the US, Americans are dogs, NATO is a dog," shouted the protesters.
Holding up Pakistani flags, the crowd marched from the capital's main commercial Blue Area and burnt a dummy marked NATO outside parliament.
Police official Mohammad Yousaf Malik said 800 people attended the demonstration and that up to 500 policemen were deployed around the diplomatic enclave to prevent any untoward incident.
The lethal November 26 NATO air strikes have brought the fragile Pakistani-US alliance to a fresh low.
Pakistan has sealed its Afghan border to NATO supply convoys, boycotted this week's Bonn conference on the future of Afghanistan and ordered US personnel to vacate an air base reportedly used by CIA drones.
COMMENTS (4)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ
how about pakistani nation tell the army to "do more" against NATO and US military and the army and the government starts listening to them for a change
Well now I kinda wish it was 25 people.
@Mj: Your so-called "allies" are killing you and you're worried about manners? Better do something about your disconnect!
FTA, "death to the US, Americans are dogs, NATO is a dog,” shouted the protesters."
Amazing show of maturity there! Running around calling other peoples and countries names, burning effigies and flags does not bring much sympathy to the cause they are protesting for or against.