Washington:
The US has suspended all high-level dialogue with Pakistan to put pressure on Islamabad to
release the American diplomat detained on possible murder charges, as the ties between the two countries have become severely strained over the issue.
The case of Raymond Allen Davis, who fatally shot two Pakistanis who threatened him from a motorcycle, has severely strained the ties between the two governments and may scuttle a proposed tri-nation summit between US, Afghan and Pakistani leaders scheduled to be held here on February 24, The Washington Post reported.
To convey its concern and displeasure at the treatment of the diplomat, the paper said, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton cancelled a meeting last weekend with Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi at an international security conference in Munich.
The US administration has twice summoned Pakistani envoy Hussain Haqqani to the White House to stress on Davis' diplomatic immunity and demand his immediate release.
The message was repeated by US Ambassador in Islamabad Cameron Hunter in his meeting with President Asif Ali Zardari.
The State Department has said that Davis, 36, holds a diplomatic passport and is a member of "technical and administrative staff" at the US Embassy in Islamabad "entitled to full criminal immunity in accordance with the Vienna Convention".
The US Congress has said that the Pakistan government should resolve the issue at the earliest or it could impact other bilateral initiatives including a whopping American aid which is bankrolling cash-starved Pakistan.
Davis was arrested in Lahore last month and produced before the local High Court which has extended his detention for another eight days. The US embassy said it was given no notice of the hearing and that David had no attorney present and he was not even provided with an interpreter.
"He was denied due process and a fair hearing," a State Department statement said, claiming "his continued detention is in gross violation of the international law."
Quoting Pakistani officials, the Post said Islamabad was divided over the case while the Foreign Ministry was pushing Davis' diplomatic immunity. Other parts of the government, which were not named, were using the issue to prove independence from Washington.
A new twist had been given to the case, the Post said, by a Pakistani intelligence official claiming that the two men Davis killed were not, as he had said, armed robbers intent on
stealing money but were intelligence agents assigned to trail him.
The official said the agents intended to frighten Davis because he crossed a "red line" that the official did not further define.
The Post said ISI and the interior ministry's intelligence bureau use motorcycle trails to track the movement of US officials.
The Pakistani media has also suggested that Davis is being held hostage to a wrongful death case brought in New York court by family members of four Americans killed in the 2008 terrorist attack in Mumbai. The court has issued summons to ISI chief Lt Gen Ahmed Shuja Pasha and four other ISI officers in the case.
The US and Indian officials have blamed the 2008 attack on Pakistani organization Lashkar-e-Taiba which has longstanding ties to ISI.
State Department spokesman P J Crowley told reporters that Clinton raised this issue of "illegal detention" of Davis by Pakistan during a telephonic conversation with President Asif Ali Zardari last week and also when she met Army Chief Ashfaq Pervez Kayanai in Munich over the weekend.
"We continue to express to them the importance of resolving this. We continue to express to them the fact that our US diplomat has diplomatic immunity and should be released," Crowley said, adding that by not releasing its diplomat, Pakistan is violating the Vienna Convention.
release the American diplomat detained on possible murder charges, as the ties between the two countries have become severely strained over the issue.
The case of Raymond Allen Davis, who fatally shot two Pakistanis who threatened him from a motorcycle, has severely strained the ties between the two governments and may scuttle a proposed tri-nation summit between US, Afghan and Pakistani leaders scheduled to be held here on February 24, The Washington Post reported.
To convey its concern and displeasure at the treatment of the diplomat, the paper said, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton cancelled a meeting last weekend with Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi at an international security conference in Munich.
The US administration has twice summoned Pakistani envoy Hussain Haqqani to the White House to stress on Davis' diplomatic immunity and demand his immediate release.
The message was repeated by US Ambassador in Islamabad Cameron Hunter in his meeting with President Asif Ali Zardari.
The State Department has said that Davis, 36, holds a diplomatic passport and is a member of "technical and administrative staff" at the US Embassy in Islamabad "entitled to full criminal immunity in accordance with the Vienna Convention".
The US Congress has said that the Pakistan government should resolve the issue at the earliest or it could impact other bilateral initiatives including a whopping American aid which is bankrolling cash-starved Pakistan.
Davis was arrested in Lahore last month and produced before the local High Court which has extended his detention for another eight days. The US embassy said it was given no notice of the hearing and that David had no attorney present and he was not even provided with an interpreter.
"He was denied due process and a fair hearing," a State Department statement said, claiming "his continued detention is in gross violation of the international law."
Quoting Pakistani officials, the Post said Islamabad was divided over the case while the Foreign Ministry was pushing Davis' diplomatic immunity. Other parts of the government, which were not named, were using the issue to prove independence from Washington.
A new twist had been given to the case, the Post said, by a Pakistani intelligence official claiming that the two men Davis killed were not, as he had said, armed robbers intent on
stealing money but were intelligence agents assigned to trail him.
The official said the agents intended to frighten Davis because he crossed a "red line" that the official did not further define.
The Post said ISI and the interior ministry's intelligence bureau use motorcycle trails to track the movement of US officials.
The Pakistani media has also suggested that Davis is being held hostage to a wrongful death case brought in New York court by family members of four Americans killed in the 2008 terrorist attack in Mumbai. The court has issued summons to ISI chief Lt Gen Ahmed Shuja Pasha and four other ISI officers in the case.
The US and Indian officials have blamed the 2008 attack on Pakistani organization Lashkar-e-Taiba which has longstanding ties to ISI.
State Department spokesman P J Crowley told reporters that Clinton raised this issue of "illegal detention" of Davis by Pakistan during a telephonic conversation with President Asif Ali Zardari last week and also when she met Army Chief Ashfaq Pervez Kayanai in Munich over the weekend.
"We continue to express to them the importance of resolving this. We continue to express to them the fact that our US diplomat has diplomatic immunity and should be released," Crowley said, adding that by not releasing its diplomat, Pakistan is violating the Vienna Convention.
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