Thursday, 28 February 2008

Statement by Professor Köchler

Patrick Haseldine has kindly drawn my attention to the following statement issued on 25 February by Professor Hans Köchler:

Statement by Dr Hans Koechler, International Observer, appointed by the United Nations, at the Scottish Court in the Netherlands (Lockerbie Trial), on the withholding of supposedly secret evidence from the Defence by order of the Government of the United Kingdom

Upon conclusion of an information and consultation visit on international law issues to the Asia-Pacific region, Dr Hans Koechler today issued the following statement on the decision of the United Kingdom’s Foreign Secretary not to allow the disclosure of a document, provided by a “Foreign Government” that is related to the electronic timer device which supposedly triggered the explosion of a bomb on board Pan Am Flight 103:

1. The continued withholding of evidence related to the case of Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed Al Megrahi makes a new appeal actually impossible. Should the document in question not be made available, criminal proceedings under Scots Law will have to be terminated.
2. The behaviour of the British Government is in contravention to the commitment it made vis-à-vis the United Nations Organization prior to the adoption of Security Council resolution 1192 (1998) to enable a fair and independent trial of the two Libyan suspects in the Lockerbie case under Scots Law.
3. The invocation of “Public Interest Immunity” (PII) – unprecedented in the history of Scottish criminal justice – is tantamount to political interference into the Appeal Court’s conduct. It is obvious that criminal proceedings cannot be fair if the Defence is denied access to a piece of evidence (document) which has been revealed to the Prosecution.
4. Under the highly politicized circumstances of the Lockerbie Trial, the issuing of a PII certificate by the Foreign Secretary of the United Kingdom appears to be a rather desperate measure to influence the conduct of the court in a manner favourable to the British Government; it further strains the constitutional relations between Scotland and the United Kingdom.
5. The separation of powers between the Executive and Judiciary is a basic characteristic of the rule of law. In the present case, this principle is violated because of the outright interference of the British Government in a matter of the Scottish Judiciary.
6. The British Government’s interference makes Devolution of authority in matters of Criminal Justice to Scotland entirely meaningless. What is the meaning of “Devolution” if a Scottish Court is prevented from operating according to its own rules? Scots Law is not to be administered under the terms of a Protectorate. The crucial question will now be whether the Scots will be able to assert their (Constitutional) independence in Devolved matters.
7. It is to be hoped that the Scottish Judges will uphold the independence of the Judiciary and will reject the British Government’s interference. A court of law is transformed into a political body should the Judges allow this kind of interference.
8. The persistent refusal of the UK Government to allow the disclosure of vital evidence to the Defence points into the direction of a cover-up. In the context of the irregularities at the Lockerbie trial and appeal in the Netherlands (described in the undersigned’s reports of 2001 and 2002), this development demonstrates the need for an independent investigation under a United Nations mandate – especially since the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission has declared that a “miscarriage of justice” may have occurred.
9. The convicted Libyan national has a right to a genuine judicial review of his verdict outside the confines of international realpolitik. In June 2007 the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission referred his case back to the High Court of Justiciary for a second appeal. If appeal proceedings are now made impossible due to the British Executive’s interference, Mr al-Megrahi will be denied his right to fair trial under the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms.

Los Angeles, 25 February 2008
Dr Hans Koechler

[The official version of the statement, with typographical errors corrected, is to be found at http://i-p-o.org/Lockerbie-statement-koechler-25Feb08.htm]

2 comments:

  1. The deliberate withholding of an important document concerning an appeal against a conviction is surely a further example of how Gordon Donaldson summarised the attitude of a British government towards the Treaty of Union of 1707 -

    'The fact is that, contrary to the beliefs and hopes of those who framed it, the treaty of union has proved to be a mere scrap of paper, to be torn up at the whim of any British government.'

    Source: 'Scotland: The Shaping of a Nation' by Gordon Donaldson, p. 59, ISBN 0 7153 6904 0.

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  2. My apologies for inadvertently omitting this crucial final sentence of Professor Koechler's statement:

    "In this case, he will be entitled to proceed to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg."

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