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Saturday, January 29, 2011

Raymond Davis US Consular Worker May Face Murder Charges


A US consular worker has been remanded in police custody for six days after shooting dead two armed assailants in Pakistan. Raymond Davis may face murder charges after the pair approached him on a motorcycle shortly after withdrawing money from an A.T.M. in the eastern city of Lahore on Thursday. Police say Davis believed the men intended to rob him in his car in a crowded street. He apparently produced a Bareta and opened fire. One gunman was killed at the scene by four separate shots. The second died later in hospital from three rounds. A third Pakistani was killed by a U.S. consulate S.U.V. as it rushed to Davis’s aid after he apparently called the mission for help. The consulate says it will surrender the vehicle and the driver to police for the official investigation. Appearing Friday in a Lahore military court, Davis apologized to the two men’s families. In a two-sentence statement Friday, the U.S. embassy confirmed that a consulate staffer "was involved in an incident yesterday that regrettably resulted in the loss of life."The U.S. was working with Pakistanis to "determine the facts and work toward a resolution," it said. But a Pakistani police officer described Davis, said to be from Virginia, as a “security official” at the Lahore consulate while others said he called himself a “technical adviser” to the authorities. As foreign mission worker he enjoys diplomatic immunity but Davis’s case is complicated by a ban on foreigners from carrying weapons in Pakistan and by local self-defense laws. Under Pakistani law one can only act in self-defense if attacked first. Merely being approached by someone wielding a gun is insufficient cause under law for the victim to pull the trigger. Also, when firing in self-defense it is only admissible to aim at non-life threatening parts of the assailant's body, such as arms or legs. The killings complicate further an already fraught relationship the United States has with Pakistan, its most important ally in fighting terrorism and Islamic militancy. Pakistani deaths at American hands are an immensely emotive issue here, where relentless CIA drone strikes aimed at insurgents have claimed the lives of hundreds of civilians in the past two years. In recent weeks there have been rallies countrywide involving thousands of protesters, angry at the attacks that they view as an invasion of national sovereignty and resentful of the US-led occupation of Afghanistan which is often sold by radicals as an American war on Islam.

2 comments:

  1. This man should be sentenced and hanged in Pakistan. He had no right to kill these innocent men . He was not allowed to carry a weapon. He was illegally carrying a barretta pistol with special bullets that were capable of piercing through armor. Besides he crushed one of the people under his car as he drove over him while trying to get away. Imagine what would have happened if a Pakistani had done the same in US..

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  2. Let's not be silly. He may have been carrying a gun illegally, but if he shot these armed men in self defense, then he's no murderer. Those two just attacked the wrong guy assuming he was a soft target. Plus, it's all a myth that he'd be carrying "special" armor piercing bullets. In fact, most self defense rounds for pistols are the exact opposite. Designed to expand and do maximum damage to flesh and not pierce armor or other hard objects.

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