Hundreds join first Pakistan rally to honour Osama's death

Within days of Osama bin Laden's death in a U.S. Navy SEAL raid in Abbottabad, Pakistan, hundreds of supporters gathered for what was described as the first public rally in the country held in his honor — a demonstration organized by Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam-Nazaryati (JUI-N), a hardline pro-Taliban religious party.
Protesters at the rally shouted anti-American slogans, denounced the Pakistani government for what they characterized as complicity in a violation of national sovereignty, and mourned bin Laden as a martyr. Some carried placards with his image; others burned American flags.
The rally was small by Pakistani political standards — attendance estimates ranged from several hundred to a few thousand — but its symbolism was significant. It illustrated the degree to which bin Laden retained genuine admiration among a segment of Pakistani society, particularly in conservative religious communities that have long viewed American military operations in the region as a war on Islam rather than a war on terror.
For Pakistan's government, the protest added to an already severe political crisis. The Abbottabad raid had exposed either catastrophic intelligence failure — that bin Laden could live for years in a fortified compound near a military academy without being detected — or something even more damaging. Pakistani officials faced intense pressure from the United States and from their own public to account for both possibilities.
The rally also served as a reminder that the death of bin Laden, however symbolically important, resolved none of the underlying tensions in a region where extremist networks have deep roots and the conditions that gave rise to them — poverty, governance failures, unresolved conflicts — remain largely intact.
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