ISLAMABAD (AP) — Pakistan's ex-foreign minister said Wednesday that his former legal advisers had told him an American detained for fatally shooting two Pakistanis did not qualify for blanket diplomatic immunity as Washington claims.
Shah Mahmood Qureshi, who stepped down earlier this month during a Cabinet shake-up but retains influence, reiterated this stance after a meeting with U.S. Sen. John Kerry — an indication that the American politician may have a rocky time convincing Pakistan to free 36-year-old Raymond Davis.
It also signaled there have been internal divisions within the Pakistani government over how to handle a case that has severely strained relations between the U.S. and Pakistan, whose partnership is considered key to ending the war in Afghanistan.
The U.S. says Davis is an embassy staffer who shot two Pakistanis in self-defense as they tried to rob him Jan. 27, and that his detention is illegal under international agreements covering diplomats. Pakistani leaders — fearful of stoking more outrage in a public already rife with anti-U.S. sentiment — have said the matter is up to the courts to decide.
A Pakistani federal official told The Associated Press on Tuesday that the government would tell a court later this week that most of its legal experts had decided that Davis is immune from prosecution. Qureshi, however, promised during a news conference that if he is summoned, he will testify that his advisers had informed him Davis may not have full immunity.
"God willing, I will side with the truth," he said. "I will never disappoint the nation."
It was not immediately clear if saying that Davis doesn't qualify for "blanket" immunity means he doesn't qualify at all for protection from prosecution in this particular case. The U.S. Embassy insists that because Davis was part of its "administrative and technical staff" he has blanket immunity.
Qureshi was the most prominent member of the Pakistani Cabinet to not be reappointed to his old post after the quick dissolution and re-creation of the prime minister's circle of advisers last week. He said he kept quiet on the Davis case earlier upon instructions from the leader of the ruling Pakistan People's Party, but implied that his stance on the matter had cost him his job. A new foreign minister has not yet been appointed.
Upon arriving in Pakistan late Tuesday, Kerry, a Democrat from Massachusetts, reached out to the government and the people, promising a U.S. criminal investigation into the shooting if Davis is released. He expressed regret over the loss of lives and acknowledged that the deaths need to be examined.
"It is customary in an incident like this for our government to conduct a criminal investigation. That is our law. And I can give you the full assurance of our government today that that will take place," Kerry told reporters in the eastern city of Lahore, where the shootings occurred.
Kerry was due to meet with Pakistani leaders Wednesday, including Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and the army chief, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani. His meeting with Qureshi indicated he believed that the former foreign minister, who is a major figure in the ruling party, still has influence.
President Barack Obama also insisted Davis be freed in talks with reporters Tuesday, saying the principle of diplomatic immunity must be upheld.
"If it starts being fair game on our ambassadors around the world, including in dangerous places where we may have differences with those governments ... that's untenable," Obama said at a news conference, his first public remarks on the case. "It means they can't do their job. And that's why we respect these conventions and every country should as well."
Part of the confusion over Davis' status lies in his background.
The administration insists that Davis was part of the embassy's "administrative and technical staff," which means he might have been involved with security, but Pakistani media have focused on him being a former Special Forces soldier who runs an American "protective services" company with his wife.
Although the U.S. says he's an embassy staffer, he apparently had been attached for a while to the consulate in Lahore, further adding to the confusion about his status since consulate employees do not always get the same level of diplomatic protection as embassy staffers.
The AP also obtained a photocopy of an ID and a salary document that Davis apparently gave Pakistani authorities, showing that he was scheduled to be paid $200,000 from Sept. 21, 2010, until Sept. 20, 2011, for "overseas protective sec. svcs.," training, administration work and insurance and travel expenses.
Davis is identified as a Defense Department contractor on the ID card.