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Pakistanis, Americans protest drones in long drive

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"I'm hoping that what [the protest] will show is that the Pakistani people and American people and even the people in the tribal areas want peace," said Joe Lombardo, a U.S. activist from Delmar, New York.

James Ricks, another American activist, said he was going along with the convoy despite the danger. "I am taking this risk because my government is committing international war crimes, and we want to stop this," said Ricks, of Ithaca, New York.

The convoy departed early in the morning, leaving behind some who arrived late in cars carrying Khan posters and the red-and-green flag of Khan's political party. Youths on motorcycles and vans blaring songs from loudspeakers rushed to catch up.

When Khan arrived in his home district of Mianwali, huge crowds greeted him and his entourage. TV footage showed him, dressed in a white traditional Pakistani dress of a long shirt and baggy pants, sitting on the roof of his vehicle and waving to his cheering supporters.

Khan, in brief chats with media at different stops, said government officials had tried to discourage people from joining the march.

"Fearing this will be an historic rally, they [government] have attempted to discourage people through scare tactics but you have seen the response," he said. "This will prove to be a historic event."

Khan has seen his popularity surge in recent years in Pakistan, where the government, led by the Pakistan People's Party of Asif Ali Zardari, has disappointed many.

The former cricket star long had a reputation as a playboy. But in recent he has said he has grown stronger in his Muslim faith. He also has used attacks on the U.S. drone program as a means of gaining public esteem in Pakistan.

The main faction of the Pakistani Taliban, which is based in South Waziristan, issued a statement Friday calling Khan a "slave of the West" and saying that the militants "don't need any sympathy" from such "a secular and liberal person."

The statement did not reveal anything about the militants' plans regarding the march, but added: "Imran Khan's so-called Peace March is not in sympathy for drone-hit Muslims. Instead, it's an attempt by him to increase his political stature."

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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