Showing posts sorted by relevance for query "Robbie the Pict". Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query "Robbie the Pict". Sort by date Show all posts

Sunday 6 July 2008

Scottish newspapers accused of shirking investigative duties

Today's issue of the Sunday Herald contains an article about a letter written by Professor Hans Köchler complaining about the supine attitude of the Scottish press over the Lockerbie miscarriage of justice. The article reads in part:

'When readers are asked what they want more of in newspapers the answer is often great, jaw-dropping scoops. Yet investigative reporting - the discipline behind many such stories - is increasingly seen by many newspaper executives as too expensive to bother with.

'This is certainly the view of Professor Hans Kochler [sic], the former UN monitor of the Lockerbie trial, who has attacked the Scottish media for its coverage of Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi's continuing appeals against his conviction.

'Kochler believes Scottish journalists are becoming unwilling to question the establishment version of events and work under editors and executives who refuse to finance proper reporting. He says he has a list of publications and journalists he believes have failed to do their jobs properly, which he may seek to publish at a later date.

'Says Kochler: "As far as Lockerbie is concerned I can't understand why more isn't being done by the European country that was most concerned with it. There is a lot at stake: the rule of law, security, the role of international terrorism. Why isn't somebody trying to find out why the authorities are now trying to withhold evidence and delaying everything?"

'In an earlier letter to veteran campaigner Robbie the Pict nee [sic] Brian Robertson, in which Kochler raised the issue of a potential media blackout, he simply wrote: "Where are Scotland's investigative journalists?"

'Kochler claims that editors reduced coverage under establishment pressure. Some journalists closely related to the story argue that the real reason why Lockerbie is off the agenda is because people are tired of it, but Kochler claims it is a symptom of a wider problem that cuts across the profession.'

The comments from members of the public which follow the article are well worth reading and are extremely well-informed.

Thursday 10 September 2009

Petition to set up public inquiry into Lockerbie

An online petition to the UK Prime Minister has been instituted. It reads: We the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to launch a public inquiry to investigate the Lockerbie bombing.

I would have preferred the petition simply to refer to the "Lockerbie disaster" since there are those, such as John Parkes and Robbie the Pict, who contend, on grounds which are not fanciful, that the destruction of Pan Am 103 was caused, not by a bomb but by the explosion of munitions being carried as cargo. This explanation, as well as the various IED explanations, deserves to be explored. I would also have preferred the petition to refer to an "independent inquiry" since the demand that the inquiry be "public" makes it easier for the UK Government to resist on the ground that certain pertinent evidence is so sensitive that its public disclosure is not in the national interest: witness the assertions of public interest immunity advanced by the Foreign Secretary in Abdelbaset Megrahi's now-abandoned appeal.

However, notwithstanding these reservations, I shall be supporting the petition. British citizens or residents who wish to sign it can do so here.

Thursday 12 August 2010

Blowing the lid off Lockerbie

"In law there is a credible alternative to the Crown theory about the explosions on Pan Am 103 which must produce doubt about the merits of the Crown case. Mr Megrahi, you deserve the benefit of that doubt and I, along with so many decent people in Scotland, am deeply embarrassed and terribly sorry that you did not receive the benefit of that doubt. I sincerely hope you manage to read this."

This is the concluding paragraph of a long essay published on the Veterans Today website by Robbie the Pict. It sets out the case for questioning the accepted wisdom that Pan Am 103 was destroyed by a bomb (rather than the accidental explosion of -- illegally carried -- munitions by RadHaz).

Wednesday 17 September 2008

Press conference at Greshornish House

Courtesy of Cuillin FM, you can listen to the press conference held at Greshornish House, Skye, yesterday morning on the occasion of the conclusion of the Greshornish House Accord.

I wish to pay a sincere tribute to Robbie the Pict for organising this meeting and for chairing it so competently. His expertise on constitutional and human rights issues made no small contribution to the success of the occasion.

Tuesday 30 September 2008

Hans Köchler and Lockerbie


I am grateful to Robbie the Pict for drawing my attention to an article by Nicola Barry on the work of Professor Hans Köchler, particularly in relation to Lockerbie, in the Scottish edition of the Sunday Express on 28 September. The article does not appear to be available online, and so I reproduce it here. Click on the image and it will become legible.

Tuesday 2 October 2007

Pan Am 103 and the mysterious sewing-machine needles

Robbie the Pict, a doughty Scottish campaigner against injustice, has a different perspective on the cause of the Lockerbie disaster. See

http://www.firmmagazine.com/members/feature.php?id=324