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Diplomatic and Consular Immunity: One Rule for Foreign Consulates in US, Another for US Consulates Abroad
26 February 2011 By Dave Lindorff
President Obama, before he was a President or a
Senator, was a constitutional law professor. He should
know the law.
And yet in the increasingly dangerous show-down over
Pakistan’s arrest and detention of Lahore consular
contract “security official” Raymond Davis, who is
charged with two counts of murder for the shooting
deaths of two young Pakistanis on January 27, the
president has grossly misstated what international law
is with respect to the immunity from prosecution of
diplomatic and consular officials.
As the president put it on a few days ago at a press
conference, “With respect to Davis, our diplomat in
Pakistan, we’ve got a very simple principle here that
every country in the world that is party to the Vienna
Convention on Diplomatic Relations has upheld in the
past and should uphold in the future. If our diplomats
are in another country, then they are not subject to
that country’s local prosecution. We respect it with
respect to diplomats who are here. We expect Pakistan,
that’s a signatory should recognize Davis as a
diplomat, to abide by the same convention.”
The first problem is that Davis isn't a "diplomat." At
best he's a consulate employee. Furthermore, whoever
wrote the president his lines or gave him his
background briefing sure didn’t read the Vienna
Convention on Consular Relations of 1963! Nor did he
or she read a document issued last August by the US
State Department titled: Diplomatic and Consular
Immunity; Guidance for Law Enforcement and Judicial
Authorities (Dept. of State Pub. 10524)
US State Dept. has one rule on immunity for
consular officials here, another for our guys overseas
The Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations of 1961
that the president mentions, and to which the State
Department keeps referring when telling Pakistani and
American journalists that Davis must be released from
jail, is really not even the relevant document. Davis
is not a diplomatic employee. He stated himself to
police that he is "only a consultant at the Lahore
Consulate". Whether even that statement is true or
not, the point is that his legal status would then be
determined in accordance with the later treaty, the
Vienna Convention on Consular Relations of 1963.
And as that document states, in Article 41:
Consular officers shall not be liable to arrest or
detention pending trial, except in the case of a grave
crime and pursuant to a decision by the competent
judicial authority.
Murder would, of course, constitute such a “grave
crime.”
Perhaps police and prosecutors in Lahore, when they
arrested Davis and jailed him pending a court hearing
on his legal status vis-a-vis possible immunity from
prosecution for the crime of murder (and possibly also
espionage, which is a charge reportedly also being
considered), were following some kind of protocol of
Pakistan’s Department of Foreign Affairs--something
akin to the US State Department’s legal advice to
American police and judicial authorities.
Because here’s what the US State Department says
regarding the immunity claims of diplomatic and
consular officials of foreign governments in the US:
International law, to which the United State is firmly
committed, requires that law enforcement authorities
of the United States extend certain privileges and
immunities to members of Foreign diplomatic missions
and consular posts. Most of the privileges and
immunities are not absolute and law enforcement
officers retain their fundamental responsibility to
protect and police the orderly conduct of persons in
the United States.
Ahem.
The document goes on to state:
Diplomatic immunity is not intended to serve as a
license for persons to flout the law and purposely
avoid liability for their actions.
The State Department guidance document notes that the
staff of embassies are afforded the highest level of
privileges and immunities in the host country
(ambassadors and their immediate subordinates, such as
the charge d’affaires) have virtually total immunity
from detention and prosecution. But it goes on to
state that it is another thing altogether when it
comes to consular officials. Here the document states:
There is a common misunderstanding that consular
personnel have diplomatic status and are entitled to
absolute immunity.
Hmmmm. Sounds like what Obama is suffering just such a
misunderstanding.
But as the State Department tells American law
enforcement personnel:
Consular officers..have only official acts or
functional immunity in respect of both criminal and
civil matters and their personal inviolability is
quite limited. Consular officers may be arrested and
detained pending trial...if their offense is a felony
and the arrest is made pursuant to a decision by a
competent judicial authority.
The document also makes it clear that it is not up to
the arrested consular official’s home country to
determine whether the person is properly being held
for trial:
No...diplomatic mission or consulate is authorized to
determine whether a given set of circumstances
constitutes an official act. This is an issue that may
only be resolved by the court with subject matter
jurisdiction over the alleged crime.
Only (a) court, in the full light of all the relevant
facts, determines whether the action complained of was
an official act.
Clearly then, the President and the State Department
are factually wrong to insist that Davis must be
released from jail. Pakistani judicial authorities in
Lahore are doing exactly what the police and courts in
the US would do with State Department blessing if a
similar incident occurred involving a foreign
country’s consular employee here in America.
Raymond Davis may never face trial for the
execution-style slaying of two Pakistanis, who appear
not to have been robbers threatening him, as claimed
by the US, but rather Pakistani intelligence agents
who were tailing him, suspecting him of being a spy,
but if he is released without facing a judicial
hearing, or if that hearing is less than a thorough
evidentiary proceeding, it will be not because of the
Vienna Conventions, but because of the intense
pressure, diplomatic, military and economic, being
brought to bear on the Pakistani government by the US,
which has dispatched Congressional representatives and
senators and the Secretary of State, and now the
President, to send the message: Let him go or else!
They might want to reconsider.
The president, the secretary of state and myriad
government flaks and Congressional stooges like Rep.
Daryl Issa and Sen. John Kerry aren’t just insulting
Americans’ intelligence with this “absolute immunity”
nonsense. They are insulting the Pakistani people.
At this point, if Davis is sprung because of US
pressure, the anger that has led Pakistanis to take to
the street by the thousands over this case, demanding
that Davis face justice for his actions, could well
explode in a revolution that will make Egypt’s People
Power uprising a distant memory.
©
EsinIslam.Com
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