In Abbottabad, the leafy garrison town where bin Laden was found and killed, about 1,000 men set tires on fire and blocked a main road, yelling: "Down, down USA!" and "Terrorist, terrorist, USA terrorist".
Pakistan's weak and fractured civilian government is widely unpopular among the country's population of 170 million, and seen as a lackey to the United States.
"If you want to save Pakistan, you will have to break the chains of American slavery," read one banner in Abbottabad.
But the gatherings were not as large as some people had expected after Pakistan's largest religious political party Jamaat-e-Islami had called for protests across the country to denounce the U.S. operation.
In the northwestern city of Peshawar some 400 people turned out, and a 300-strong rally was held in the central city of Multan.
A similar number rallied in the Egyptian capital Cairo, an AFP correspondent reported, while in Philippine capital Manila a few dozen worshippers joined a protest march to the U.S. embassy.
One of those who refused to protest, Abdul Maksood Dalupang, said: "The prophet Mohammed did not preach extremism. In case there is a jihad (holy war), Muslims are not allowed to kill the innocent, the women and children, nor should they destroy infrastructure."
Obama's meeting with the SEALS was to take place at the Fort Campbell army base in Kentucky, an official said, a day after he paid homage to the victims of al-Qaida's September 11, 2001, attacks at the site of the World Trade Center in New York.
The president "will have the opportunity to privately thank some of the special operators involved in the operation," the official said.
Amid heightened tensions with Pakistan, a key U.S. ally in the war in Afghanistan, Obama appears to be seeking to mark bin Laden's killing while avoiding accusations of triumphalism.
Thursday's ceremony at Ground Zero in New York was low-key and sombre: a remembrance of those nearly 3,000 fallen rather than a victory celebration, despite the momentous nature of the al-Qaida leader's death almost a decade after his attacks drove a wedge between the West and the Muslim world.
After days of questions in Washington over how the 9/11 architect found shelter under military noses, Pakistan's military has hit back with demands that the U.S. cut its troop presence in the country to a "minimum".
Pakistan's army chief of staff General Ashfaq Kayani threatened Thursday to "review" co-operation in the event of another U.S. raid.
In a sign of complete U.S. distrust of its key ally, CIA chief Leon Panetta has said Washington had kept Islamabad in the dark about the raid for fear of the al-Qaida chief being tipped off. |