Raymond Allen Davis is not Tweeting, by the way
When a popular uprising unseats a dictator after 30 years of tyranny,
it makes waves. Huge ones. So huge that one can excuse the media for
glossing over or even ignoring what could legitimately be called
‘ripple’.
US consular employee Raymond Allen Davis, 36 arrested in
Pakistan. AP |
On the other hand, it must be noted that what happened in Egypt, for
example, was not as some misguided and self-important Americans of the
United States believe a phenomenon powered by Twitter and Facebook.
Tyrannies sit on people. Long tyrannies make sitting very
uncomfortable. People shift position. Something pops and things are
never the same again. The something that popped was a national stomach
that just could not digest things stuffed down into it anymore.
Hosni Mubarak therefore got a bellyful; just desserts, as they say.
They belly, so to speak, took time filling; it didn’t happen overnight.
The people of Egypt had to stomach a lot of things.
The last ‘thing’ precipitated the rupture, yes, but the ‘last thing’
would not have been the last had there not been a ‘first thing’.
Changing structures
Raymond Allen Davis
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- Born: October 2, 1974
(age 36)
- Residence: Highlands Ranch, Colorado, US
- Criminal charge: Homicide
- Criminal status: On trial
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Those other things are now glossed over, a hero and martyr identified
and new distortions penned. That’s politics. That’s historiography.
Nothing new. We don’t know about Egypt’s tomorrow, but the focus is not
about changing structures but who will succeed Hosni.
Right now, friends, it’s all in the hands of the military which as we
all know was Hosni’s creature and by extension that of the United States
of America. In any event, ‘Egypt’ blocked out effectively ‘other news’,
other ripples if you will and among them the story of one Raymond Davis,
the slip-under-carpet of which would have been a relief to Washington.
Here’s a brief account:
On January 26, 2011, a US citizen called Raymond Davis shot two
Pakistanis in a market area in Lahore.
Davis’ call for help brought a second vehicle which ran over a
pedestrian and fled.
The victim, Rehman, a bicyclist travelling on Jail Road in Lahore,
was struck and killed by a four-wheel drive vehicle that was part of
what this Davis describes as a ‘mission’ in his statement to Police.
Diplomatic status
Davis was taken into custody. The US Embassy says Davis was an
employee which doesn’t necessarily make him a diplomat nor give him
gun-carrying licence.
On January 31, 2011, ABC News reveals that Davis was associated with
a security firm in Florida. The US Embassy continues to insist that he
has diplomatic status. Pakistani officials state that the Foreign Office
had not issued the ‘diplomatic card’ to Davis.
The US Government in a ‘diplomatic note’ backs down from ‘diplomatic
status’ and admits that not all administrative and technical staffers of
embassies and consulates in Pakistan were granted such status.
The US Embassy argued however that this fact does not annul
diplomatic immunities. The US wants the Pakistani Government to make a
determination and not leave resolution in the hands of the courts. All
this on February 3, 2011. While Pakistani and US officials haggle over
diplomatic niceties, two men lie dead.
On February 6, 2011, a woman called Kanwal commits suicide by taking
insecticide. She was the 26-year old widow of one of Davis’ victims,
Faheem Ahmed who had married her just six months ago.
Self-defence
Meanwhile, people have been checking out this Raymond Davis. The call
records for Davis indicates considerable contacts in South Waziristan
and other troubled areas. He is now found to have visited these areas,
posing as a newly-converted British Muslim. We don’t know if the US
Embassy knew all this or actually sanctioned such bluff.
It is hard to believe however that relevant screening would not have
been carried out.
Davis’ camera contains photographs of sensitive areas in Pakistan and
especially defence installations. Perhaps capturing such images served
some ‘diplomatic’ purpose, we do not know and the USA will not tell. His
camera contained photos of the strategic Balahisar Fort, the
headquarters of the paramilitary Frontier Corps in Peshwar and of
Pakistani army bunkers on the Eastern border with India, we are now
told.
It’s now being called ‘a crisis’ by the USA.
Arm-twisting has begun. Members of Congress have openly threatened
Pakistan of withdrawing billions of dollars of promised aid unless the
man is released.
While Davis claims he shot in self-defence, neither he nor his
backers in Washington, including CNN which is giving the usually ‘our
man cannot be anything but innocent’ spin on the story, will deny the
profile of the man that is emerging in the investigations.
There is more to the story. Davis in his ‘other life’ is a co-owner
of Hyperion Protective Services (HPS), LLC, a private security business
(run by himself and his wife and based in Las Vegas, Nevada with a
branch office in Highlands Ranch, Colorado).
He had given his wife a number to contact should he fall into
trouble. The number belongs to a CIA official. The US Embassy is mum on
this, as it is regarding the right or otherwise of Davis to carry a
firearm.
Nothing either on the fact that the two vehicles involved in the
incident were not registered to the US consulate, nor the fact that they
were heading towards Mozang Chungi, a densely populated area of small
shops and street vendors typically only used by local residents.
Private contractors
Security sources in Pakistan state: “No American tourist or diplomat
would ever go there, certainly not two car loads of heavily armed
private contractors equipped for a mission of some kind. The only
possible reason to be there would be terrorism. The area has been
attacked before by terrorists, taking advantage of the crowds and
confusion.
We suspect we may have stumbled on the source of previous terror
attacks and, in fact, broken up what may have become another ‘Mumbai.’
We have false identity, phony licence plates, a car filled with weapons,
radios and surveillance gear, two men being shot in the back with
special fragmenting anti-personnel ammunition, nine unexplained trips to
Afghanistan over the past 18 months and a lot of mumbo-jumbo being
mouthed by US diplomats. I am waiting for something on this man to come
on Twitter, i.e. from someone like Hillary Clinton, or perhaps a
Facebook post. Might cause some waves, huh?
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