[The following are excerpts relating to Lockerbie from a long essay entitled "Who said Gaddafi had to go?" by Hugh Roberts in the 17 November 2011 edition of the London Review of Books. The whole essay merits close study. I am grateful to regular blog commentator Vronsky for drawing it to my attention.]
As early as 1987 he was experimenting with liberalisation: allowing
private trading, reining in the Revolutionary Committees and reducing
their powers, allowing Libyans to travel to neighbouring countries,
returning confiscated passports, releasing hundreds of political
prisoners, inviting exiles to return with assurances that they would not
be persecuted, and even meeting opposition leaders to explore the
possibility of reconciliation while acknowledging that serious abuses
had occurred and that Libya lacked the rule of law. These reforms
implied a shift towards constitutional government, the most notable
elements being Gaddafi’s proposals for the codification of citizens’
rights and punishable crimes, which were meant to put an end to
arbitrary arrests. This line of development was cut short by the
imposition of international sanctions in 1992 in the wake of the
Lockerbie bombing: a national emergency that reinforced the regime’s
conservative wing and ruled out risky reform for more than a decade. It
was only in 2003-4, after Tripoli had paid a massive sum in compensation
to the bereaved families in 2002 (having already surrendered Abdelbaset
Ali al-Megrahi and Al Amin Khalifa Fhima for trial in 1999), that
sanctions were lifted, at which point a new reforming current headed by
Gaddafi’s son Saif al-Islam emerged within the regime. (...)
Since February, it has been relentlessly asserted that the Libyan
government was responsible both for the bombing of a Berlin disco on 5
April 1986 and the Lockerbie bombing on 21 December 1988. News of
Gaddafi’s violent end was greeted with satisfaction by the families of
the American victims of Lockerbie, understandably full of bitterness
towards the man they have been assured by the US government and the
press ordered the bombing of Pan Am 103. But many informed observers
have long wondered about these two stories, especially Lockerbie. Jim
Swire, the spokesman of UK Families Flight 103, whose daughter was
killed in the bombing, has repeatedly expressed dissatisfaction with the
official version. Hans Köchler, an Austrian jurist appointed by the UN
as an independent observer at the trial, expressed concern about the way
it was conducted (notably about the role of two US Justice Department
officials who sat next to the Scottish prosecuting counsel throughout
and appeared to be giving them instructions). Köchler described
al-Megrahi’s conviction as ‘a spectacular miscarriage of justice’.
Swire, who also sat through the trial, subsequently launched the Justice
for Megrahi campaign. In a resumé of Gaddafi’s career shown on BBC
World Service Television on the night of 20 October, John Simpson
stopped well short of endorsing either charge, noting of the Berlin
bombing that ‘it may or may not have been Colonel Gaddafi’s work,’ an
honest formula that acknowledged the room for doubt. Of Lockerbie he
remarked cautiously that Libya subsequently ‘got the full blame’, a
statement that is quite true.
It is often claimed by British and American government personnel and the
Western press that Libya admitted responsibility for Lockerbie in
2003-4. This is untrue. As part of the deal with Washington and London,
which included Libya paying $2.7 billion to the 270 victims’ families,
the Libyan government in a letter to the president of the UN Security
Council stated that Libya ‘has facilitated the bringing to justice of
the two suspects charged with the bombing of Pan Am 103, and accepts
responsibility for the actions of its officials’. That this formula was
agreed in negotiations between the Libyan and British (if not also
American) governments was made clear when it was echoed word for word by
Jack Straw in the House of Commons. The formula allowed the government
to give the public the impression that Libya was indeed guilty, while
also allowing Tripoli to say that it had admitted nothing of the kind.
The statement does not even mention al-Megrahi by name, much less
acknowledge his guilt or that of the Libyan government, and any
self-respecting government would sign up to the general principle that
it is responsible for the actions of its officials. Tripoli’s position
was spelled out by the prime minister, Shukri Ghanem, on 24 February
2004 on the Today programme: he made it clear that the payment
of compensation did not imply an admission of guilt and explained that
the Libyan government had ‘bought peace’.
The standards of proof underpinning Western judgments of Gaddafi’s Libya
have not been high. The doubt over the Lockerbie trial verdict has
encouraged rival theories about who really ordered the bombing, which
have predictably been dubbed ‘conspiracy theories’. But the prosecution
case in the Lockerbie trial was itself a conspiracy theory. And the
meagre evidence adduced would have warranted acquittal on grounds of
reasonable doubt, or, at most, the ‘not proven’ verdict that Scottish
law allows for, rather than the unequivocally ‘guilty’ verdict brought
in, oddly, on one defendant but not the other. I do not claim to know
the truth of the Lockerbie affair, but the British are slow to forgive
the authors of atrocities committed against them and their friends. So I
find it hard to believe that a British government would have fallen
over itself as it did in 2003-5 to welcome Libya back into the fold had
it really held Gaddafi responsible. And in view of the number of
Scottish victims of the bombing, it is equally hard to believe that SNP
politicians would have countenanced al-Megrahi’s release if they
believed the guilty verdict had been sound. The hypothesis that Libya
and Gaddafi and al-Megrahi were framed is to be taken very seriously
indeed. And if it were the case, it would follow that the greatly
diminished prospect of reform from 1989 onwards as the regime battened
down the hatches to weather international sanctions, the material
suffering of the Libyan people during this period, and the aggravation
of internal conflict (notably the Islamist terrorist campaign waged by
the LIFG between 1995 and 1998) can all in some measure be laid at the
West’s door.
[Another important London Review of Books article from September 2009 "The framing of al-Megrahi" by Gareth Peirce can be found here.]
MISSION LOCKERBIE, 2011, doc. nr.7067.rtf. (google translation, german/english):
ReplyDeleteWhere exactly is the problem of the opening of the "Files of the Scottish Criminal Cases Reappeal Commission (SCCRC) - to avoid at all costs ?:
1) A judicial "law-blockade" could opened before long time -- and thus are not the problem.
2) Criminal charges against UK forensic experts, about the manipulations of different evidence ? -- the offences of officials have statutory limitation, thus is negligible and no marked of the problem.
4) claims brought by Libya now 'NTC' against the UK, in billion US$ ? : -- one
possible reason for the problem.
5) What will Great Britain and Scotland to explain the "World" if after the opening of the "SCCRC-Files" and the related secret documents provable show that the Libyan official Abdelbaset Al Megrahi and Libya, have nothing to do with the bombing on PanAm-103 ?: -- this is for the Scottish Parliament the real great problem !
6) Why and whose idea it was, to gave the order in UK , to manipulate the crucial evidences (between 22nd June 1989 and 14th November 1991) to involve the ex Gadhafi regime in the "Lockerbie-Tragedy", with the two officials, Abdelbaset Ali Mohamed Al Megrahi and Al Amin Khalifa Fhimah,
through a "Statement of Facts" by Lord Advocate of Scotland ?
7) The answers are in the "formation" - soon ...
by Edwin Bollier, MEBO Ltd. Telecommunication. URL: www.lockerbie.ch
MISSION LOCKERBIE, 2011, doc. nr.7067.rtf. in german:
ReplyDelete1.) Eine juristische "Gesetzes-Blockade" ?: -- Könnte schon längst geöffnet werden, somit kein Grund des Problems.
2.) Strafanzeigen gegen UK- Forensic-Experten, wegen Manipulationen von verschiedenen Beweismitteln ?: -- Die Strafbaren Handlungen von Offiziellen sind verjährt, somit vernachlässigbar, kein markanter Grund des Problems.
4.) Schadenersatzklagen von Libya jetzt 'NTC' gegen UK, in Milliarden US$ ? :--Ein möglicher Grund des Problems.
5.) Was wird Great Britain und Scotland der "Welt" erklären, wenn durch die Öffnung der "SCCRC-Files" und den dazugehörigen geheimen Akten beweisbar wird, dass der libysche offizielle Abdelbaset Al Megrahi und Libyen mit dem Attentat auf PanAm-103 nichts zutun haben ?:-- Hier liegt für das "Scottish Parliament" das tatsächliche Problem !
6.) Wieso und auf wessen Idee hin, wurden in UK und Scottland die entscheidenden Indizien-Beweise zwischen Juni 1989 und Nov. 1991 manipuliert, bezw. gefälscht, um das damalige Gadhafi Regime mittels den zwei Offiziellen,
Abdelbaset Ali Mohamed Al Megrahi und Al Amin Khalifa Fhimah, durch ein "Statement of Facts by Lord Advocate of Scotland" in die "Lockerbie-Tragödie" zu verwickeln ?
7.) Die Anworten sind sich am "formatieren" -- bald...
by Edwin Bollier, MEBO Ltd. Telecommunication. URL: www.lockerbie.ch
Thanks for bringing this to our attention Vronsky.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteHmmm, but the British also believe that Gaddafi armed the IRA therefore presumably being responsible for many more British deaths than were involved at Lockerbie. So when Mr Hughes writes "the British are slow to forgive the authors of atrocities committed against them and their friends. So I find it hard to believe that a British government would have fallen over itself as it did in 2003-5 to welcome Libya back into the fold had it really held Gaddafi responsible" is he questioning the Libya IRA connection? Maybe he just has a higher opinion of the integrity of the British state than I do.
ReplyDelete