[The following are excerpts from a long article by Robert Parry published yesterday on the Consortium News website:]
During the six-month uprising against Muammar Gaddafi, major US news
outlets repeated again and again that the Libyan dictator was behind the
1988 bombing of Pan Am 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, and they ignored
warnings that militant Islamists were at the core of the anti-Gaddafi
rebel army. (...)
Only outside the mainstream press would you find significant questions asked about the certainty over Libya’s guilt in the Pan Am bombing and about the makeup of the rebels.
Now, after the United States and its NATO allies have engineered the
desired “regime change” in Libya – under the pretext of “protecting
civilians” – those two points are coming more into focus.
The New York Times and The Washington Post on Thursday finally
acknowledged that radical Islamists, including some with links to
al-Qaeda, are consolidating their power inside the new regime in
Tripoli.
And, the proverbial dog not barking – even as Libya’s secret
intelligence files have been exposed to the eyes of Western journalists –
is the absence of any incriminating evidence regarding Libya’s role in
the Lockerbie case. Earlier interrogations of Libya’s ex-intelligence
chief Moussa Koussa by Scottish authorities also apparently came up
empty, as he was allowed to leave London for Qatar.
Since Gaddafi’s fall, news outlets also have reported that Libyan
intelligence agent, Ali al-Megrahi, who was convicted of the Lockerbie
bombing by a Scottish court and was later released on humanitarian
grounds because of terminal prostate cancer, is indeed gravely ill,
bedridden and seemingly near death.
Megrahi’s trial in 2001 before a panel of Scottish judges was more a
kangaroo court than any serious effort to determine guilt – even a
Scottish appeals court [RB: Presumably it is the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission that is being referred to] expressed concern about a grave miscarriage of
justice – but the Western press continues to describe Megrahi, without
qualification, as the “Lockerbie bomber.”
It also was common in the West’s news media to smirk at the notion
that Megrahi was truly suffering from advanced prostate cancer since he
hadn’t died as quickly as some doctors thought he might. After Gaddafi’s
regime fell, Megrahi’s family invited BBC and other news organizations
to see Megrahi struggling to breathe in his sick bed.
His son, Khaled al-Megrahi, also continued to insist on his father’s
innocence. “He believes and we know that everybody will see the truth,”
the younger Megrahi told the BBC. “I know my father is innocent and one day his innocence will come out.”
Asked about the people who died in the bombing, the son said: “We
feel sorry about all the people who died. We want to know who did this
bad thing. We want to know the truth as well.”
As more information becomes available inside Libya, the facts may
finally be clarified about whether Gaddafi’s government did or did not
have a hand in the bombing over Lockerbie. However, so far, the
indications are that Megrahi may well have been railroaded by the
Scottish judges who found a second Libyan defendant innocent and were
under political pressure to convict someone for the crime.
After Megrahi’s curious conviction, the West imposed harsh economic
sanctions on Libya, agreeing to lift them only if Libya accepted
“responsibility” for the bombing and paid restitution to the families of
the 270 victims. To get rid of the punishing sanctions, Libya accepted
the deal although its officials continued to insist that Libya had
nothing to do with the Lockerbie bombing.