Yet again David Cameron attacks the Scottish administration over the release on compassionate grounds of Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi, the man convicted of the Lockerbie bombing.
The sister, brother-in-law and niece
of a good friend of mine during my teaching days at Our Lady's High School,
Motherwell, died on the night of December 21, 1988, when debris from the
explosion aboard Clipper Maid of the Seas, Pan Am Flight 103, landed on their
home in Lockerbie.
The Prime Minister states quite
unequivocally: "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 270 people who were
murdered." Naturally, Labour's Justice Spokesman at Holyrood, Lewis
Macdonald, joins in: "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." And the Tory Holyrood whip,
John Lamont, speaks of "an embarrassing milestone" and a decision
that "looks more and more outrageous".
Where were they and why were they
functionally silent when the decision to free Megrahi was being made? I ask the
same of Her Majesty's Government of the day.
I say "functionally silent"
because a lot of these people had a lot to say in all the wrong places.
Under the devolution disposition, in
relation to legislation all matters concerning national security, foreign
policy and foreign relations are reserved to Westminster. Similarly, in
relation to executive action all matters concerning national security, foreign
policy and foreign relations are reserved to Whitehall. Megrahi's arrest,
detention, trial, imprisonment and then, finally, the decision to set him free
on licence intimately involved all elements of that oft-times-unholy trinity.
I am neither a politician nor a
lawyer, but it would seem to me that prima facie the Westminster Government
could and should have been the only organ of state to make any decisions in
relation to Megrahi's possible release. And if the Scottish administration
argued otherwise why did no-one from the Westminster Government, or the
Opposition benches, seek to determine what the view of the courts, north and/or
south of the Border, would be to an application to stay the Scottish
administration's hand for want of jurisdiction by virtue of these higher
political and constitutional considerations?
Hugh McLoughlin
[RB: Any such application would have failed. Responsibility under the devolution settlement for compassionate release (or prisoner transfer) of prisoners in Scottish prisons rests in law squarely and clearly with the Scottish Government. In any event, as we all know, the then Labour Government at Westminster was very keen indeed that Megrahi should be repatriated. That, after all, was the principal aim of Tony Blair's deal in the desert.]
Hugh McLoughlin
[RB: Any such application would have failed. Responsibility under the devolution settlement for compassionate release (or prisoner transfer) of prisoners in Scottish prisons rests in law squarely and clearly with the Scottish Government. In any event, as we all know, the then Labour Government at Westminster was very keen indeed that Megrahi should be repatriated. That, after all, was the principal aim of Tony Blair's deal in the desert.]
How convenient for our Prime Minister
that Megrahi has survived 1000 days and he can rail at this and the First
Minister, Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill and all the medical advisers who
recommended release on compassionate grounds. Neither he nor his advisers seem
to have taken into account the very real doubts over the safety of the
conviction with bribed witnesses and withheld crucial information. Megrahi is
not by any means the first person to survive a terminal condition for several
years and he will not be the last.
However, by bringing this topic up in
such a public way it gives him the opportunity to deflect attention from what
is being called the "omnishambles" of his Government. Daily we are
reminded just what an incompetent bunch he and his ministers are: witness the
granny tax, pasty tax, the NHS reforms, P45s for troops on duty, sale of the
Harrier jump-jet fleet at a knock-down price to America, destroying Nimrod
surveillance aircraft, aircraft carriers that will have no planes until 2020 or
thereby and now the jump-jet reversal of choice. If it had been written as a
theatrical farce the audience would be in stitches.
Nigel Dewar Gibb
Nigel Dewar Gibb
I was always a fan of Dr Finlay's Casebook but I didn't expect
a Dr Cameron to make a return to medicine.
David Cameron obviously now sees
himself as a medical expert (I guess as much a medical expert as he is a
financial and political one) in that he seems to believe that he would have
been able to predict the lifespan of Megrahi better than a few Scottish medical
experts can.
Whatever the truth of the Lockerbie
bombing it seems crass, to say the least, to use it to score rather weak
political points. If this is the best case he can find to question the judgments
of the Scottish Government then it seems we must be doing quite a good job of
running our own country after all.
Dave Bertin
Dave Bertin
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