[This is the headline over an editorial in today's edition of the Maltese newspaper The Times. It reads as follows:]
Two hundred and seventy people died
when Pan Am flight 103 exploded over Lockerbie in Scotland on December 21,
1988. One man, Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, was convicted of the crime but the story
is not over yet because, according to a report by a Scottish review commission,
there may have been a miscarriage of justice.
Mr al-Megrahi had unsuccessfully
appealed and then dropped a second appeal shortly before the highly
controversial decision by Scotland to release him on compassionate grounds in
August 2009 as he had been expected to die from cancer within three months. He
is still alive though bedridden.
Investigators had alleged that the
suitcase containing the bomb that destroyed the aircraft in the explosion had
started its journey from Malta, a claim that the Maltese government had
persistently denied. According to the investigators, the case had also
contained fragments of clothing made by a manufacturer in Malta and sold by a
shop in Sliema.
A Scottish newspaper, the Sunday Herald, has now published online
a report into the al-Megrahi case, drawn up by the Scottish Criminal Cases
Review Commission and which had been kept secret for five years. In the
commission’s view, seven vital pieces of evidence had not been disclosed by the
Crown Office. It argues that, had such information been shared with the defence
team, the outcome of the trial could have been different.
At stake in the review commission’s
report is the credibility of the evidence given by a Maltese shopkeeper and
which was a determining factor in the case for the prosecution. Confirming
media reports that the shopkeeper and his brother had been compensated by the
US State Department for their evidence, the commission argued, correctly, that
the information should have been disclosed. It held the information could have
been used to question the shopkeeper’s credibility. Had this been done, it
could have put the prosecution’s case in serious difficulty.
Jim Swire, who lost a daughter in the
terrorist act, believes there is even more compelling evidence relating to a
“fabricated” metal fragment initially used to trace the bomb to Libya. He holds
that the fragment was made and planted deliberately as evidence to mislead the
Scottish courts. Following the publication of the review commission’s report,
he now feels the Maltese government ought to petition the Crown Office in
Edinburgh to reopen the investigation.
Dr Swire has for long believed that
Mr al-Megrahi is innocent of the crime.
There are bound to be differences
over whether there is need for Malta to clear its name with some arguing, for
example, that there had never been any conclusive evidence that the bomb had
left from here and that the country had never been accused of aiding
terrorists. This may very well be true but the perception created by the
investigators’ conclusion that the case containing the bomb had started its
journey from Malta is hard to remove without conclusive evidence to the
contrary.
It would, therefore, be only fair for
Malta to have the perception removed altogether if this is at all possible
after so many years since the explosion.
Scottish Justice Secretary Kenny
MacAskill has said that issues raised in the review commission’s report would
have been properly considered by the Appeal Court had Mr al-Megrahi not
withdrawn his appeal. So, whose interest is it now to ensure that there has not
been a miscarriage of justice? And is it not crucial for Malta to clear its
name altogether?
There was a lot of implicit suggestion and veiled accusation that the Maltese security system was corrupt, and subverted wholesale to aid Libya in bombing PA103. Indeed Vincent Cannistraro is on record making the explicit accusation, though not in a court of law.
ReplyDeleteMost particularly, in the judgement of the first appeal, there is the acceptance of the prosecution's assertion that the suitcase was put on board KM180 at Luqa "by a criminal act". Whose criminal act? Implicitly, the Maltese security operatives.
Indeed, there is a good case for Malta needing to clear its name.