I am grateful to Dr Jim Swire for sending me the full text of the article that appeared in The Scotsman on 14 March (see post on that date on this blog). It reads as follows (the version in The Scotsman was slightly edited):
"The issues here are tied into the development of the Scottish devolution process, they involve a great deal more than the sanctity of Mr Megrahi's (described by your headline as 'the Lockerbie bomber') appeal process.
"As the Lockerbie case progressed, the prosecution found itself in possession in 1996 of material that Mr Miliband now claims cannot be divilged to the defence. This occurred originally, it is said, because at the time, Scotland's Lord Advocate was ex officio a member of the UK government.
"Mr Miliband has, as your article says, now taken out Public Interest Immunity certificates(PIIs) to 'protect' the documents from release to either the defence or the public.
"Since a basic tenet of Scottish criminal law is 'equality of arms' between the defence and prosecution in a criminal case, it is hard to see how anyone can contend in the present circumstances that the 2nd appeal could be considered fair. Specially since the SCCRC seemed to be including the contents of these documents (which they had also been shown) in their reasons for referring the case back.
"PII certificates, carry as their justification and title, the interests of 'the public'. What may be at stake here, unless a solution is found in the High Court, is the freedom of the Scottish criminal system to be, and to be seen to be, independent of political control from Whitehall.
"If that absolute independance of Scottish law were not to be decisively established, and soon, it would be a black day indeed for the scottish public, which presumably Mr Miliband also claims to serve.
"The citizen needs to have faith in the independence and fairness of his judicial system, which he might need to use to protect himself from injustice imposed by his own government, let alone that in Westminster: selective disclosure to the prosecution in so grave a criminal case cannot be right."
A commentary on the case of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, convicted of the murder of 270 people in the Pan Am 103 disaster.
Monday, 24 March 2008
And again ...
I am off tomorrow (Tuesday 25th) to Oudtshoorn for the Klein Karoo Nasionale Kunstefees, the Afrikaner equivalent of the Edinburgh Festival. There will therefore be no postings on this blog before Sunday, 30 March. Fortunately, as far as a trawl of the internet and the blogosphere can show, there is little of interest happening (at least in public) on the Lockerbie front.
Thursday, 20 March 2008
Service interruption
Because I am on duty at Gannaga Lodge over the Easter weekend (barman, porter, dishwasher, assistant chef) I shall not be in a position to post on this blog until Monday, 24 March at the earliest.
Wednesday, 19 March 2008
American lawyer sues firm over Lockerbie work
Douglas Rosenthal, an American attorney, is suing his former firm, Sonnenschein, Nash and Rosenthal for $8.5m in the Washington DC Superior Court for its alleged failure properly to recognise, and to compensate him for, his work in representing relatives of passengers killed in the destruction of Pan Am 103. An account of the first week of the court proceedings can be read here.
Saturday, 15 March 2008
An anniversary ... just a day late
14 March 2008 marks the sixth anniversary of the dismissal of Abdelbaset Megrahi's appeal against conviction. That appeal was unsuccessful because his then lawyers did not ask the Appeal Court to address the correct questions: see the very first post on this blog (section headed "The Appeal").
In the appeal which is currently wending its way -- painfully slowly -- through the Scottish criminal justice system, the correct issues have been raised, and the result should be the overturning of Mr Megrahi's conviction.
In the appeal which is currently wending its way -- painfully slowly -- through the Scottish criminal justice system, the correct issues have been raised, and the result should be the overturning of Mr Megrahi's conviction.
Friday, 14 March 2008
Alternative take: Dr Jim Swire, father of Lockerbie victim Flora Swire
This is the title of an article in today's issue of The Scotsman. It starts:
"As the Lockerbie case progressed, the prosecution found itself in possession in 1996 of material that Mr [David] Miliband now claims cannot be divulged to the defence.
"This occurred originally, it is said, because at the time, Scotland's Lord Advocate was ex officio a member of the UK government.
"Mr Miliband has now taken out Public Interest Immunity certificates (PIIs) to 'protect' the documents from release to..."
The article is in the premium (ie pay to view) section of The Scotsman's website, and so I am not in a position to quote more of it or to summarize its contents since I resolutely refuse to pay for access to the newspaper (a) because I am a Scot and (b) because this once-great newspaper has in recent times declined disastrously.
The full article (if you are a subscriber) can be read here.
The readers' comments are of interest, even if you cannot access the full text of Dr Swire's article.
"As the Lockerbie case progressed, the prosecution found itself in possession in 1996 of material that Mr [David] Miliband now claims cannot be divulged to the defence.
"This occurred originally, it is said, because at the time, Scotland's Lord Advocate was ex officio a member of the UK government.
"Mr Miliband has now taken out Public Interest Immunity certificates (PIIs) to 'protect' the documents from release to..."
The article is in the premium (ie pay to view) section of The Scotsman's website, and so I am not in a position to quote more of it or to summarize its contents since I resolutely refuse to pay for access to the newspaper (a) because I am a Scot and (b) because this once-great newspaper has in recent times declined disastrously.
The full article (if you are a subscriber) can be read here.
The readers' comments are of interest, even if you cannot access the full text of Dr Swire's article.
Monday, 10 March 2008
Dr Swire on the PII decision
Dr Jim Swire has a letter about the PII issue in today's issue of The Herald. It reads:
"It is hard to see how the Westminster Foreign Secretary can justify his attempt to 'protect'documents with Public Interest Immunity (PII) certificates on the grounds that they would harm the UK's relations with other nations, and that their release to the defence in the Lockerbie case would disadvantage the very public PIIs are designed to serve.
"It appears these documents were supplied to the prosecution (and Dumfries and Galloway police) about 12 years ago, and concern the truth about a terrorist atrocity of nearly 20 years ago. It also appears they were considered by the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission (SCCRC) to be part of their reason for considering the original trial and appeal might have been unsafe. The Foreign Secretary must realise that the longstanding release of them to the prosecution, but not the defence, wrecks any chance of the next appeal being considered fair. Coupled with their inclusion in the SCCRC's referral back to appeal, this grossly selective restriction can only destroy any remaining vestige of faith in the freedom and independence of Scotland's judicial system.
"No doubt the defence will continue to fight for the documents to be released to them. Meanwhile, the use of the PII certificates will be seen outside these islands as at best a delaying tactic by Whitehall, and at worst a calculated attempt to ensure Mr Megrahi does not get a fair appeal and the relatives are denied the truth about the murder of their loved ones, as are the the public, while Scotland's independent criminal law is seen as enslaved to Britain's politicians."
For the full text, and readers' comments, see
http://www.theherald.co.uk/features/letters/display.var.2105464.0.No_justification.php
"It is hard to see how the Westminster Foreign Secretary can justify his attempt to 'protect'documents with Public Interest Immunity (PII) certificates on the grounds that they would harm the UK's relations with other nations, and that their release to the defence in the Lockerbie case would disadvantage the very public PIIs are designed to serve.
"It appears these documents were supplied to the prosecution (and Dumfries and Galloway police) about 12 years ago, and concern the truth about a terrorist atrocity of nearly 20 years ago. It also appears they were considered by the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission (SCCRC) to be part of their reason for considering the original trial and appeal might have been unsafe. The Foreign Secretary must realise that the longstanding release of them to the prosecution, but not the defence, wrecks any chance of the next appeal being considered fair. Coupled with their inclusion in the SCCRC's referral back to appeal, this grossly selective restriction can only destroy any remaining vestige of faith in the freedom and independence of Scotland's judicial system.
"No doubt the defence will continue to fight for the documents to be released to them. Meanwhile, the use of the PII certificates will be seen outside these islands as at best a delaying tactic by Whitehall, and at worst a calculated attempt to ensure Mr Megrahi does not get a fair appeal and the relatives are denied the truth about the murder of their loved ones, as are the the public, while Scotland's independent criminal law is seen as enslaved to Britain's politicians."
For the full text, and readers' comments, see
http://www.theherald.co.uk/features/letters/display.var.2105464.0.No_justification.php
Saturday, 8 March 2008
The Herald on the PII decision
Lucy Adams has a comprehensive article on the Appeal Court's ruling on the PII issue in today's issue of The Herald. As she makes clear, all that the court decided yesterday was that it was competent for the Advocate General to claim PII on behalf of the UK Government. There will now be a further hearing on the substantive issue of whether the document should be disclosed in the interests of justice, notwithstanding the UK Government's desire for the document to be withheld. The full article can be read here.
Friday, 7 March 2008
The Appeal Court's decision on PII
The Criminal Appeal Court has rejected the argument by Mr Megrahi's legal team that it is incompetent for the Advocate General for Scotland on behalf of the UK Government to claim public interest immunity in Scottish legal proceedings where the Lord Advocate declines to do so. The court held that, under the law governing devolution to Scotland, it must be permissible for a UK Government departments to claim PII in Scottish proceedings, just as the Lord Advocate could do on their behalf prior to devolution. For the full text of the court's judgment, see
http://www.scotcourts.gov.uk/opinions/2008HCJAC15.html
This is the outcome that I predicted in respect of this issue: see
http://lockerbiecase.blogspot.com/2008/02/third-procedural-hearing-much-as.html
The court has ordered further argument on whether it should compel disclosure of the document notwithstanding the UK Foreign Secretary's claim of PII. A possibility that has been canvassed is that it should be handed over, not to Megrahi's lawyers, but to a specially appointed independent counsel. This is a mechanism sometimes adopted in England in terrorism cases, but it has not heretofore been resorted to in Scotland.
Here are the reports about the court's decision from the websites of The Scotsman and the BBC:
http://news.scotsman.com/latestnews/Appeal-setback-for-Lockerbie-bomber.3856346.jp
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/south_of_scotland/7283139.stm
http://www.scotcourts.gov.uk/opinions/2008HCJAC15.html
This is the outcome that I predicted in respect of this issue: see
http://lockerbiecase.blogspot.com/2008/02/third-procedural-hearing-much-as.html
The court has ordered further argument on whether it should compel disclosure of the document notwithstanding the UK Foreign Secretary's claim of PII. A possibility that has been canvassed is that it should be handed over, not to Megrahi's lawyers, but to a specially appointed independent counsel. This is a mechanism sometimes adopted in England in terrorism cases, but it has not heretofore been resorted to in Scotland.
Here are the reports about the court's decision from the websites of The Scotsman and the BBC:
http://news.scotsman.com/latestnews/Appeal-setback-for-Lockerbie-bomber.3856346.jp
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/south_of_scotland/7283139.stm
Lockerbie: Truth - the final casualty
This is the title of an article just published on the website of the Mathaba News Agency, an organisation which concentrates on material relevant to North Africa. The article profiles some of the principal characters in the Lockerbie story, and also highlights the Westminster Government's "interference" in the Scottish judicial process, particularly in relation to its objections to disclosure of the mysterious foreign document relating to timers. See
http://www.mathaba.net/rss/?x=584537
http://www.mathaba.net/rss/?x=584537
Thursday, 6 March 2008
The public interest immunity decision
I am reliably informed that the Criminal Appeal Court's decision on the public hinterest immunity (PII) plea taken by the UK Government (in relation to the document from a foreign country relating to timers) will be released tomorrow (Friday, 7 March). This was the issue debated at the third procedural hearing held on 20 February. See
http://lockerbiecase.blogspot.com/2008/02/third-procedural-hearing.html
and
http://lockerbiecase.blogspot.com/2008/02/third-procedural-hearing-much-as.html
The court has to decide (a) whether it is competent for the Advocate General for Scotland (the UK Government's Scottish legal adviser) to claim PII in Scottish criminal proceedings when the Lord Advocate (Scotland's public prosecutor and a minister in the Scottish Government) has chosen not to claim it; and (b) if it is competent, whether the public interest in "national security", which the UK Government is asserting would be affected if the document were disclosed, outweighs the public interest in the administration of justice which requires that accused persons should have access to all material that could assist their case.
There will also on Friday be a further brief procedural hearing at which Mr Megrahi's legal team will raise the issue of the Crown's refusal to allow them access to the productions used at the original trial; and the issue of the Crown's contention (in the face of appellate decisions to the contrary) that the new appeal should be confined to those issues in respect of which the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission (SCCRC) decided that there might have been a miscarriage of justice. In my account on this blog on 20 December 2007 of the second procedural hearing where this issue was first raised, I commented:
"Two other matters were discussed at the hearing. The first was the scope of the appeal. The Crown had earlier stated that it would consider asking the court to exercise its discretion to refuse to allow to be argued all (or some) of the Grounds of Appeal that related to matters that had been investigated by the SCCRC but rejected by that body. Today Mr Clancy went considerably further: the Crown now wished to argue that, as a matter of law, the Appeal Court was not permitted to hear Grounds of Appeal that had not been accepted by the SCCRC. That is a legal issue that has already been decided by a three-judge bench who held in 2004 that there was no such restriction on the Grounds of Appeal that could be heard. Nothing daunted, Mr Clancy asked for a five-judge court to be convened to reconsider the matter. The court ordered the Lord Advocate to submit within one month a written note setting out her legal arguments and appointed the appellant to submit written answers within one month thereafter. A five-judge court would then be convened to hear oral argument."
http://lockerbiecase.blogspot.com/2008/02/third-procedural-hearing.html
and
http://lockerbiecase.blogspot.com/2008/02/third-procedural-hearing-much-as.html
The court has to decide (a) whether it is competent for the Advocate General for Scotland (the UK Government's Scottish legal adviser) to claim PII in Scottish criminal proceedings when the Lord Advocate (Scotland's public prosecutor and a minister in the Scottish Government) has chosen not to claim it; and (b) if it is competent, whether the public interest in "national security", which the UK Government is asserting would be affected if the document were disclosed, outweighs the public interest in the administration of justice which requires that accused persons should have access to all material that could assist their case.
There will also on Friday be a further brief procedural hearing at which Mr Megrahi's legal team will raise the issue of the Crown's refusal to allow them access to the productions used at the original trial; and the issue of the Crown's contention (in the face of appellate decisions to the contrary) that the new appeal should be confined to those issues in respect of which the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission (SCCRC) decided that there might have been a miscarriage of justice. In my account on this blog on 20 December 2007 of the second procedural hearing where this issue was first raised, I commented:
"Two other matters were discussed at the hearing. The first was the scope of the appeal. The Crown had earlier stated that it would consider asking the court to exercise its discretion to refuse to allow to be argued all (or some) of the Grounds of Appeal that related to matters that had been investigated by the SCCRC but rejected by that body. Today Mr Clancy went considerably further: the Crown now wished to argue that, as a matter of law, the Appeal Court was not permitted to hear Grounds of Appeal that had not been accepted by the SCCRC. That is a legal issue that has already been decided by a three-judge bench who held in 2004 that there was no such restriction on the Grounds of Appeal that could be heard. Nothing daunted, Mr Clancy asked for a five-judge court to be convened to reconsider the matter. The court ordered the Lord Advocate to submit within one month a written note setting out her legal arguments and appointed the appellant to submit written answers within one month thereafter. A five-judge court would then be convened to hear oral argument."
Wednesday, 5 March 2008
Lockerbie's plans for 20th anniversary
The BBC Scotland news website is running the following article about Lockerbie's plans for the twentieth anniversary of the disaster on 21 December 2008:
'Community groups in Lockerbie are planning a "low key" approach to the 20th anniversary of its air disaster.
'A total of 270 people were killed when Pan Am flight 103 blew up above the Dumfries and Galloway town on 21 December 1988.
'Local organisations said they hoped events would "remember the past" but also be "focused on the future".
'Residents have been asked to make their suggestions for commemoration events to the town's district council.
'Proposals can also be left at the town hall.
'The anniversary falls on a Sunday this year and an ecumenical service is planned by local churches.
'All commemoration sites around the town will have extended opening hours and a symbolic quilt has been commissioned.
'Lockerbie Academy is also organising a number of events with a particular focus on the links between Lockerbie and Syracuse University which lost 35 students in the disaster.'
See http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/south_of_scotland/7279203.stm
'Community groups in Lockerbie are planning a "low key" approach to the 20th anniversary of its air disaster.
'A total of 270 people were killed when Pan Am flight 103 blew up above the Dumfries and Galloway town on 21 December 1988.
'Local organisations said they hoped events would "remember the past" but also be "focused on the future".
'Residents have been asked to make their suggestions for commemoration events to the town's district council.
'Proposals can also be left at the town hall.
'The anniversary falls on a Sunday this year and an ecumenical service is planned by local churches.
'All commemoration sites around the town will have extended opening hours and a symbolic quilt has been commissioned.
'Lockerbie Academy is also organising a number of events with a particular focus on the links between Lockerbie and Syracuse University which lost 35 students in the disaster.'
See http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/south_of_scotland/7279203.stm
Sunday, 2 March 2008
Andrew Fulton: is he a professor?
The Sunday Herald reports that Andrew Fulton's CV, issued to the press when he was appointed chairman of the Conservative Party in Scotland, claims that he is a visiting professor at Glasgow University's School of Law. The university denies this. The article reads in part:
"The new chairman of the Scottish Tories has become embroiled in a row over his CV after false claims were made about his academic credentials.
"Andrew Fulton, a former MI6 spy who was appointed by the Conservatives on Friday, was hailed as a 'visiting professor' at Glasgow University's school of law.
"But a spokesman for the university rebutted the claims, saying: 'Mr Fulton is not associated with the University of Glasgow's law school and is not entitled to call himself a professor.' Fulton, 64, took up the post as the Scottish Tories' top official last week and received endorsements from Conservative leaders David Cameron and Annabel Goldie.
"The biography supplied to the media claimed he had read law at Glasgow University and was 'now visiting professor at his alma mater's school of law'.
"But Fulton, who was a government diplomat for 30 years, was only briefly a visiting professor at the university between 1999 and 2000. He worked in the university's law school at the Lockerbie Trial Briefing Unit until he was dropped from his post when he was unmasked as an ex-spook.
"Visiting professors lose their title after leaving a university, but the academic status symbol has somehow followed Fulton in his business career."
The full article can be read here.
"The new chairman of the Scottish Tories has become embroiled in a row over his CV after false claims were made about his academic credentials.
"Andrew Fulton, a former MI6 spy who was appointed by the Conservatives on Friday, was hailed as a 'visiting professor' at Glasgow University's school of law.
"But a spokesman for the university rebutted the claims, saying: 'Mr Fulton is not associated with the University of Glasgow's law school and is not entitled to call himself a professor.' Fulton, 64, took up the post as the Scottish Tories' top official last week and received endorsements from Conservative leaders David Cameron and Annabel Goldie.
"The biography supplied to the media claimed he had read law at Glasgow University and was 'now visiting professor at his alma mater's school of law'.
"But Fulton, who was a government diplomat for 30 years, was only briefly a visiting professor at the university between 1999 and 2000. He worked in the university's law school at the Lockerbie Trial Briefing Unit until he was dropped from his post when he was unmasked as an ex-spook.
"Visiting professors lose their title after leaving a university, but the academic status symbol has somehow followed Fulton in his business career."
The full article can be read here.
Saturday, 1 March 2008
Andrew Fulton
A member of Glasgow University's Lockerbie Trial Briefing Unit (which provided press briefings during the trial at Zeist) who resigned when his connections with the UK Secret Intelligence Service were revealed, has been appointed chairman of the Conservative Party in Scotland. Today's issue of The Herald contains the following:
“A former MI6 spy appointed as Scottish Tory chairman yesterday insisted the party could recover from two decades of "fallow" results at the next General Election.
“Andrew Fulton, who has spent more than 30 years in senior positions in the secret service, claimed the Conservatives had an opportunity to catch the SNP on the hop at Westminster and exploit the current disarray of Labour and Liberal Democrats.…
“The former agent, who was born in Rothesay on the Isle of Bute, also brings his own baggage to the post: his unmasking as an MI6 operative led to him stepping down in 2000 as an adviser to Glasgow University's briefing unit which advised the media about the Lockerbie bombing trial amid speculation - which he strongly denied - that he had a competing agenda.
“Last year he became the first acknowledged former spy to join a listed British company when he was appointed as an adviser to the Armor Group, which provides security services to national governments.”
Read the full article here:
http://www.theherald.co.uk/politics/news/display.var.2085939.0.Fallow_decades_are_over_says_new_Scots_Tory_chairman.php
“A former MI6 spy appointed as Scottish Tory chairman yesterday insisted the party could recover from two decades of "fallow" results at the next General Election.
“Andrew Fulton, who has spent more than 30 years in senior positions in the secret service, claimed the Conservatives had an opportunity to catch the SNP on the hop at Westminster and exploit the current disarray of Labour and Liberal Democrats.…
“The former agent, who was born in Rothesay on the Isle of Bute, also brings his own baggage to the post: his unmasking as an MI6 operative led to him stepping down in 2000 as an adviser to Glasgow University's briefing unit which advised the media about the Lockerbie bombing trial amid speculation - which he strongly denied - that he had a competing agenda.
“Last year he became the first acknowledged former spy to join a listed British company when he was appointed as an adviser to the Armor Group, which provides security services to national governments.”
Read the full article here:
http://www.theherald.co.uk/politics/news/display.var.2085939.0.Fallow_decades_are_over_says_new_Scots_Tory_chairman.php
Friday, 29 February 2008
Lockerbie "a dump"
For the past few days the Scottish newspapers (and some UK ones) have been running the story of SNP MSP Christopher Harvie's description of Lockerbie as "a dump" with two-thirds of shops derelict, and shell-suited drunken youths rampaging in the streets. Professor Harvie has partially recanted but the row rumbles on. Here is an article on the subject from one of the local newspapers, The Dumfries & Galloway Standard.
As someone born and brought up in the town, and who last visited it in November 2007, I can testify that Harvie is grossly exaggerating. The town has attractive buildings, the vast majority of the commercial premises are occupied (and those few which are not are certainly not derelict) and the youth are no more prone to drunken hooliganism than the youth of other Scottish towns and cities (which is not, perhaps, saying too much).
As someone born and brought up in the town, and who last visited it in November 2007, I can testify that Harvie is grossly exaggerating. The town has attractive buildings, the vast majority of the commercial premises are occupied (and those few which are not are certainly not derelict) and the youth are no more prone to drunken hooliganism than the youth of other Scottish towns and cities (which is not, perhaps, saying too much).
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