A councillor who became a spokeswoman for the people of Lockerbie in the wake of the 1988 aircraft bombing has become an MBE in the New Year Honours list.
Marjory McQueen, 63, was a Conservative councillor for Lockerbie on Dumfries and Galloway Council for 12 years.
Mrs McQueen became a public face for the town during the trial of Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi, who was convicted of carrying out the atrocity.
She also co-ordinated the media during the 10th anniversary of the bombing. (...)
Mother-of-two Mrs McQueen, who served as a councillor from 1995 until 2007, said she was both "surprised" and "privileged" to be appointed an MBE. (...)
"Lockerbie moved on very quickly. I know it will always be synonymous with the disaster but Lockerbie has always been about community.
"My role was to liaise with the media for the 10th anniversary and make sure that the town and its people were disturbed as little as possible by the media."
[From a report on the BBC News website.
Mrs McQueen is wholly right in saying that Lockerbie moved on very quickly. Within a couple of years of the disaster, the town had returned to its wonted normality. The inhabitants view continued media interest in the town as an annoyance and an intrusion. Relatives of those who died are undemonstratively accepted when they visit. But even the most insensitive journalists quickly realise that their presence is unwelcome.]
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