Last
Friday afternoon the Crown Office issued a
statement, which took many by surprise, announcing that the SCCRC
would not be prosecuted for publishing its report on Abdelbaset’s case. As Professor Bob Black noted on his blog:
For at least two-and-a-half years the issue of publication of the Scottish Criminal Cases Review
Commission’s Statement of Reasons in the Megrahi case has been a matter of
public and political concern. The Scottish Government first produced a
Statutory Instrument The Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission (Permitted
Disclosure of Information) Order 2009 which (so it was said) was intended to facilitate publication.
When that, as could have been — and was — widely anticipated, did not have the
desired(?) effect, the Scottish Government introduced the Criminal Cases (Punishment and Review)(Scotland) Bill which is currently before the Scottish Parliament. This is also so
hedged about with conditions that publication of anything useful under it is in
the highest degree unlikely.
But wait! All of this fevered activity was
completely unnecessary. All that needed to happen was for the Lord
Advocate to grant to the SCCRC immunity from prosecution under section 194J of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995,
the provision which makes it a criminal offence for the SCCRC to publish its
reports. This the Lord Advocate did yesterday.
If, as we have been assured from the outset, the Crown Office and the Scottish
Government devoutly wished the Megrahi Statement of Reasons to be published,
why was this step not taken long ago?
MISSION LOCKERBIE, 2012:
ReplyDeleteThank you and congratulation to chief reporter of Ms Lucy Adams, of newspaper 'heraldscotland', for the publication of the long expected "SCCRC- Files", was blocked many years by the Scottish Parliament...
Edwin and Mahnaz Bollier, MEBO Ltd. Switzerland. URL: www.lockerbie.ch