Thursday 12 August 2010

Fringe stages father's quest for Lockerbie justice

[This is the headline over a Reuters news agency report on the US ABC News website. It reads in part:]

The Lockerbie disaster has come to the Edinburgh Fringe stage as a compelling 70-minute monologue which pours fuel onto a blazing dispute about the man convicted of the airliner bombing over Scotland 22 years ago.

Abdel Basset al-Megrahi was imprisoned in Scotland after his conviction for bombing Pan Am flight 103, which blew apart on a flight from London to New York in December 1988, killing 270 people, most of them American.

Lockerbie: Unfinished Business tells the tale of Doctor Jim Swire, whose 24-year-old daughter Flora died on the plane and who is convinced that Megrahi's conviction was a travesty of justice. The play follows his fight for "truth and justice."

The play has come to the stage in the midst of continuing American fury over the Scottish justice secretary's decision to release Megrahi on compassionate medical grounds last year.

The decision caused outrage among the families of victims in the United States and has set the US Senate on a collision course with Scotland's devolved parliament in Edinburgh.

The production -- written and acted by David Benson in the persona of Swire -- has left packed audiences uncertain of whether a round of applause is an appropriate gesture of appreciation as the curtains close on the hushed final scene.

Benson said the script was drawn from interviews with Swire, documentary sources and the devastated father's own account of his life since December 21, 1988, in an as-yet unpublished book. (...)

Two Libyans were eventually accused of the Lockerbie bombing. One was acquitted but Megrahi was found guilty in 2001 and given a 27-year sentence in a Scottish prison near Glasgow.

Unfinished Business traces Swire's growing fears that the original conviction was wrong and his quest to get to the bottom of what happened. A Scottish review commission said in 2007 there were grounds to believe there may have been a miscarriage of justice and a High Court appeal process opened in 2008.

Swire hoped the appeal would uncover the facts, but Megrahi was diagnosed with terminal cancer and withdrew his appeal as he was released on compassionate grounds to return to Tripoli just a year ago.

Swire and his wife Jane saw a preview of the play in Oxford before it came to Edinburgh. Benson said he was thankful he had not known they were in the audience.

"I didn't fancy going to it really," Swire told Reuters by telephone from his home. "I thought I would find it very difficult to cope with it. But it was unsentimental I thought, accurate I thought...and I didn't find it difficult to cope with at all."

He is now seeking a "properly empowered inquiry" to probe all aspects of the case.

"So it's very useful to have this play on show at the moment."

6 comments:

  1. Yes, its very useful indeed. Its out there speaking to people.

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  2. Very good indeed that Lockerbie in in the hands you know something of the atrocity of truth in the matter, while the Congressional stock theatre and bamboozled US media does not.

    Not that as you know, I lend myself to Jim's position 100%. But he's an honest man: the Bushes and the CIA aren't

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  3. Dear Mr Bunntamas,

    Where was the court at Zeist? How did the proceedings open in the court every day. Did you come as an American relative, or off your own bat. What ere the names of the judges and the counsel. Please include the names of the junior counsel.

    John Mosey or Jim Swire atteneded evry day of the trial. Did you introduce yourself to them. How crowded was the court. Where was the jury sitting. How was the translation done.

    I think you've got to tell us a lot of information, before we can believe you were at Zeist. I was, but not for the whole trial.

    What does semi-plenary troth mean, Mr Taylor's favourite phrase. Where were the American officials sitting in the court. Where was Professor Hans Kochler sitting. Why was he there.

    Please give the form of the swearing in of witnesses at the trial.

    Ca you do it? Was the trial continuous.

    Where did Dr Swire sit. Where did Mr Megrahi's family sit.

    Of what religion is the Rev Mosey a pastor?

    Where did the macer sit. What is a macer? How long was the lunch break?

    We are easily ask John and Jim whethere they recall you?

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  4. BBC2 is about to show a review of the Lockerbie play, if anyone's interested.

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  5. Do tell us the details Rolfe when you have then. I have a steam television that does BBC2

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