Adil Najam
UPDATE POST HERE: March 16, 2011: Raymond Davis Released! This Story Ain’t Over Yet!
Strangely, the more we get to know about the case of Raymond Davis, the less we seem to know. Even more strangely, the fact that the entire incident happened in broad daylight and in front of dozens of witnesses seems is itself confusing the facts rather than adding clarity. Moreover, it seems that no one seems to want to get much clarity either; although different parties may want different parts of the story to ‘disappear.’ The incident was rather eerie and disturbing to begin with; and it continues to become more so.




Here is what one does know. Raymond Davis, a staff member of the US Consulate in Lahore shot two Pakistani men dead on Thursday in a crowded part of Lahore (Mozang Chowk), according to him in self-defense. A US Consulate vehicle that rushed in to ‘rescue’ Mr. David then ran over a third person, who also died. A murder case was then registered against Raymond Davis, who was handed into police custody. A case has also been registered against the driver of the US Consulate vehicle that ran over a third person, but the driver has not yet been apprehended. After a fair deal of scrambling by both US and Pakistani officials on what to do or say, the positions of both have now started becoming clear and they have taken the stance that is usually taken in such cases: the US is asking that Raymond Davis, as a diplomatic functionary, should be handed back to them; Pakistan seems to be responding that the matter is sub judice and should take its course.
Beyond that, there are more questions than answers. For most part, these questions fall into three categories: (1) Questions about who is Raymond Davis? (2) Questions about exactly what happened at Mozang, Lahore? (3) Questions about what should happen now ?
On the first question, earliest reports suggested that Raymond Davis was a “technical adviser” and a “consular” official. More recently, US Embassy officials have described him as a “functionary” of the Embassy assigned to the US Consulate in Lahore and carrying a US Diplomatic passport. Reportedly he was hired at the US Consulate in Lahore as a security contractor from a Florida-based firm Hyperion Protective Consultants. All of this has material relevance to whether he would enjoy diplomatic immunity or not, but even more because of the apprehensions of many Pakistanis that he could be linked to the CIA or to the infamous firm Blackwater (later renamed XE Services).
And that leads squarely to the second question: what exactly was happening at Mozang? Very much in line with the immediate knee-jerk reaction of many Pakistanis, an early commentary by Jeff Stein in The Washington Post seemed to suggest rather fancifully that the shootout could have been a “Spy rendezvous gone bad?” That would be a conspiracy theory, but not an entirely implausible one. Mozang is not a part of town that you would expect too many foreigners, let alone a US official, visiting; and certainly not in what was reportedly a rented private vehicle. And while Pakistan today is clearly an unsafe place, the question of just why an Embassy official was carrying a firearm be wished away. On the other hand, however, Mr. Davis claims that he shot in self defense as the two men on the motorcycle were trying to rob him at gun point. Anyone who knows Pakistan knows all too well that this, too, is entirely possible. TV footage and reports coming immediately after the incident showed one of the young men lying dead with a revolver and wearing an ammunition belt. And certainly, the question of why at least one of the two young men on the motorcycle was carrying a loaded firearm cannot be wished away just because he had “dushmani.” Indeed, serious questions need to be asked about just who the two young men on the motorcycle were, just as they need to be asked about who Raymond Davis is. There just seem to be too many unnecessary weapons in too much proximity in this story. All of the many explanations that are floating around are very disturbing, but also very plausible. Which is exactly why this story is even more dangerous if left unresolved.
Finally, the third question – which is now getting the most attention – about what should happen now. Much is being made – maybe too much – about the Vienna Convention and its implications for diplomatic immunity. Familiar diplomatic games about the minutia of vocabulary are being played and will in most likelihood result in all too familiar results. That is exactly what one would expect in any such situation anywhere. But this is not ‘any‘ situation’; and this is not ‘anywhere‘. This is about US-Pakistan relations: there is just about nothing that the US can say or do which Pakistanis are likely to believe, and there is just about nothing that Pakistan can say or do which Americans are likely to trust. Which is why getting stuck in the intricacies of the Vienna Convention of 1963 is the exact wrong place to get stuck. This is a time for public diplomacy: certainly from the US and maybe even from Pakistan. It is not in America’s interest to be seen to be standing in the way of justice and due process. And it is not in Pakistan’s interest to be seen to conducting a flawed process of justice. There are too many people on the extreme in both countries who will not and cannot to change their opinion and apprehensions about the other. But there are even more people in both countries who could all too easily be swayed to the extremes on distrust if this delicate case is not handled with clarity and transparency by both countries. Doing so will probably bring with it more than just a little diplomatic embarrassment. Not doing so can only bring worse in the tinderbox that is US-Pakistan relations.




















































US’s double standards.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/can-a-dipl omat-get-away-with-murder-1282444.html
Let us see.
1. A diplomat who did not wanted to be identified as a diplomat (he was travelling in a local rented vehicle). <- this can mean that he was planning a murder and run away cause it was very easy to be identified as a diplomat otherwise.
2. A robber that was displaying too much of ammunition (if they were there to rob then they should have been carrying lesser weapons). <- this could mean that they were there with primary objective to kill the person.
3. The run away vehicle hits another man (a panic state of driver to get away at any cost). <- The Pakistani mob is very dangerous thing, they flog the victims first and then make up stories to cover the incidence.
4. The US is demanding the man to be released under diplomatic rules (diplomats do get immunity). <- but this immunity means that they are to be tried of their crimes in a foreign land in their own courts.
Consider:
Salman Taseer dead only a few weeks ago. <- Religious tensions at their height.
Tunisia and Egypt burning down. <- Anti-corruption movements to look forward to and that also from brother Islamic countries.
Continued militancy in many parts of the country. <- Anti-US and West sentiments are growing specially with the growing collateral damage for the Pakistanis
Current govt. at a very unpopular level. <- Many factions want to blame everything on the current rulers and have a fresh start for themselves
One wrong decision and the mobs will start moving in the streets.
And now the Conspiracy Theory:
The Diplomat was en-route to purchase information about the whereabouts of the targets in tribal areas. It was a trap laid down by the militants. They wanted to kidnap him and get information about the spies within their ranks who were continuously selling information to the US consulate. When they US embassy person opened fire they backed out because killing was not the prime objective. The US now wants the person out because he has too much information that must not reach the Pakistani ISI and IB.
… and I bet that before tis incidence the name 'Raymond Davis' was never mentioned by the US authorities as the embassy staff that are to get diplomatic immunity. (note that the important clause of geneva conventions states that the immune persons should be pre-declared their immunity status and not after they have committed some crime).
From todays papers, a mask(Niqab) and a GPS system was found out in cars. What a US consulate person has to do with a GPS system and a pistol?
It’s interesting to note that Reymond has served in Afghanistan and was expelled few years ago from Peshawer as well due to his “weird” activities.
I’m sure this topi drama will end soon and Zardari Regime will release him after doing some “deal” with US.
@yahya, read the news to get the non-sense out of head.
He shot them first through the window of his car. Got out of the car shot them again, took pictures. Threatened others who were around. Got back into his car and sped away, injuring many other who got in his way. Does that help?
I think that the US Embassy is making up lies about who Raymond Davis really is. But why is our media also not telling us who those two men really were and they were going about with guns on morotcycles. Their guns are as difficult to explain as Davis’s.