David Cameron has said the length of time since the man convicted of the Lockerbie bombing was freed is a reminder of a wrong decision taken by the Scottish Government and an insult to the victims' families.
Abdelbaset
Ali Mohmed al Megrahi is set to mark on Wednesday the thousandth day since his
release. He was allowed to return to Libya by Scottish Justice Secretary Kenny
MacAskill on compassionate grounds because he was suffering from prostate
cancer.
It
is believed his survival is linked in part to treatment with a cancer drug,
Abiraterone, not routinely available on the NHS in Scotland.
Prior
to his release, doctors predicted Megrahi had three months to live but as the
landmark date approaches, the Prime Minister told The Herald: "One thousand days on, this is yet another
reminder that Alex Salmond's Government's decision to free the biggest mass
murderer in British history was wrong and an insult to the families of the 270
people who were murdered."
Labour
and the Scottish Conservatives also questioned Mr MacAskill's decision while
Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie called for an investigation into claims
crucial information was withheld from Megrahi's trial.
Labour
justice spokesman Lewis Macdonald said: "Every anniversary and milestone
reached by the man responsible for Scotland's worst-ever act of terrorism must
be a grim reminder for the families of the Lockerbie victims. Given that
Megrahi was given roughly 100 days to live at the time Kenny MacAskill chose to
release him, it is astonishing that he is now set to reach 1000 days and calls
into question the reasons for the Justice Secretary's decision."
Scottish
Conservative chief whip John Lamont said it was "an embarrassing
milestone" for the Scottish Government, and that with every week that goes
by, the release decision "looks more and more outrageous".
Mr
Rennie said: "However evil Megrahi is, however badly the SNP handled his
release and however long he has survived, rather than obsessing about whether a
dying man is dead yet we should be investigating whether crucial information
was withheld from the trial."
A
spokesman for Mr MacAskill said extensive scrutiny had vindicated the decision.
"Whether
people support or oppose the decision, it was made following the due process of
Scots law and we stand by it: al Megrahi is an extremely sick man dying of
terminal prostate cancer."
The
spokesman said "substantial opinion" including that of Nelson Mandela
and Dr Jim Swire, whose daughter died in the airline bombing, supported the
decision.
He
said the Government respects the views of those who oppose it, but regardless
of those views "they can have complete confidence that it was taken on the
basis of Scots law".
[What
is truly an insult to the Lockerbie families and to the people of Scotland is
the failure to investigate the shameful performance of the Scottish criminal
justice system in the investigation, prosecution and conviction of Abdelbaset
Megrahi. See I
accuse… and Dave’s disgrace. Scottish lawyers' magazine The Firm has published on its website a news item about Willie Rennie's statement.]
How ghoulish is that, counting the days and figuring out when 1,000 have passed?
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