Can Raymond Davis Case Trigger
Egypt-Like Situation in Pakistan?
By B. Raman
In response to readers' questions, I
had earlier ruled out the
possibility of an Egypt-like mass
uprising in Pakistan despite the
economic hardships being faced by
the people. In support of my
argument, I had, inter alia,
referred to the disorganised state
of the youth and trade union
movements in Pakistan.
2. As I monitor the public anger
building up in Pakistan over what
growing sections of the people see
as the bullying tactics adopted by
the US Government to secure the
release and departure to the US of
Raymond Davis a member of the staff
of either the US Consulate-General
in Lahore or the US Embassy in
Islamabad (one does not know which),
who allegedly shot dead two
Pakistanis in Lahore on January 27,
2011, I am no longer that certain
that there cannot be an uprising in
Pakistan.
3. Yes, I still feel there cannot be
an uprising in Pakistan over
domestic issues and the style
of governance. But if the public
anger over the Davis case continues
to build up as a result of the
surprising mishandling of the case
by the US State Department, one may
be faced with a mass uprising over
the issue of the country's relations
with the US.
4. The Egyptian people rose in
revolt because they were fed up with
the dictatorship of Hosni Mubarak
and his corruption and
insensitivity to the economic
hardships of the people. The US
failed to read the writing on the
wall. In Pakistan, large sections of
the population---including the
youth--- are showing signs of
getting fed up with the way they
think the US has been treating their
country as evidenced by its alleged
bullying tactics to secure his
release and departure.
5. Facts are no longer the issue
disturbing the people----whether
Davis is a diplomat or not; whether
he enjoyed diplomatic immunity or
not; whether he is a CIA employee or
not. The real issue has become the
way the US is seen to be treating
Pakistan. Normally, one would have
expected the State Department to
engage in quiet discussions with the
Governments in Islamabad and Lahore
and persuade them to let him go in
return for an apology by the US
Government for his act in allegedly
killing two Pakistanis and
compensation for the families of
the Pakistanis killed. Instead of
doing so, the State Department
continues to adopt tactics which
are seen in Pakistan as nothing but
bullying.
7. "No more bullying by the
US"----that is the mounting cry in
Pakistan. The Drone (pilotless
planes) strikes in the tribal belt
caused sporadic ant-US anger in the
tribal belt, but it remained
confined to the tribal areas. It
did not spread to the rest of
Pakistan. The anger over the Davis
case has been in the whole of
Pakistan. The elite as well as the
common people, the religious as well
as the liberal sections of the
population are resentful of the
manner in which they see the US as
dictating terms to their Government.
8. There is an urgent need for the
US to make changes in the way it has
been handling the case. Otherwise,
the public anger could lead to
unpredictable consequences creating
further instability in Pakistan and
making it difficult for the
Government to co-operate with the US
on issues viewed as affecting
Pakistan's sovereignty and
self-respect.
9. Previously, critics of the Drone
strikes used to accuse the US of not
respecting Pakistan's sovereignty.
Now critics of the US handling of
the Davis case are accusing it of
not caring for the dignity and
self-respect of the Pakistani State
and people.
(The writer is Additional Secretary
(retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt.
of India, New Delhi, and, presently,
Director, Institute for Topical
Studies, Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)