Wednesday, 29 April 2009

UK and Libya make prisoner deal

[The following is from the BBC News website. The full text can be read here.]

The UK has signed a prisoner transfer agreement with Libya, the Foreign Office has confirmed. [Note by RB: More accurately, the agreement, which was signed some time ago, has now been formally ratified by both countries and is now in force.]

The agreement will allow the man convicted of the Lockerbie bombing to apply to serve the rest of his sentence in a Libyan jail.

Abdelbasset Ali al-Megrahi, 57, who has prostate cancer, is currently being held in Greenock prison in Scotland.

He has begun a second appeal against his conviction for the 1988 attack on Pan AM Flight 103. (...)

Any possible transfer to a Libyan prison would depend on Megrahi dropping his current appeal, which is expected to last a year.

And any transfer agreement would have to be ratified by Scottish ministers, who would have the final say before the Foreign Office. [Note by RB: I am not sure precisely what this means. The correct position is that, if an application for transfer is made, it is the Scottish Government that has to decide whether or not to grant it.]

There has been no comment from Megrahi's legal team about whether they are to apply for him to be transferred to a Libyan jail.

Megrahi's second appeal is being heard by five judges in Edinburgh, headed by Scotland's senior judge, the Lord Justice General, Lord Hamilton.

He has already lost one appeal against his conviction for the 1988 atrocity in which 270 people died.

Since then he has been in prison in Scotland, and must remain in jail until at least 2026.

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