[This is the headline
over a report (behind the paywall) in
today’s edition of The Times. It reads as follows:]
The doctor who lost his daughter in the 1988 Lockerbie bombing
has reaffirmed his belief that the Libyan man convicted of the attack is
innocent.
Jim Swire said he was convinced that
Abdul Baset Ali al-Megrahi had been the victim of a miscarriage of justice,
despite the belief of the new Libyan governement that al-Megrahi is guilty of
the mass murder of the 270 passengers.
In one exchange Ashour Shamis, an adviser
to Abdurrahim al-Keib, the Libyan Prime Minister, told Dr Swire: “As far as the
Libyans are concerned, the Gaddafi regime, Gaddafi personally, are involved in
planning and executing the atrocity. There is no doubt about it. They are
involved, the regime are involved.”
Mr Shamis added that al-Megrahi was
involved in the bombing, if “only a small player”. He went on: “Megrahi is an
employee of Libyan security there is no doubt about it — of Libyan security.
And if he was told to do something, he would have done it.”
Dr Swire said he had not accepted that
argument. Mr Shamis, along with the rest of new government, had simply not had
time to consider the case with any thoroughness.
“I found Tripoli percolated with the desire to pin everything
imaginable under the sun on the defunct Gaddafi regime, because the people are
so delighted to have got rid of him,” said Dr Swire. “Mr Shamis certainly
believes al-Megrahi was guilty. I tried to make plain that if you look at the
evidence that it is not at all likely.”
Dr Swire added that he hoped the documentary would re-awaken
interest in al-Megrahi’s conviction, in a Scottish court at Camp Zeist, in the
Netherlands, in 2001. The Libyan was released from Greenock prison on
compassionate grounds in 2009 because he is suffering from terminal cancer.
“The verdict is vulnerable and would be
repealed if there were a full inquiry into it,” said Dr Swire. “The Scottish
public should understand what’s going on in their name: the support of an
unsupportable verdict.”
A petition calling for a review of the
al-Megrahi case has been lodged with Holyrood’s Justice Committee and will be
debated in the Scottish Parliament next month.
[It is not the petition (PE 1370) that the Justice Committee will be considering next month but Justice for Megrahi's evidence on Part 2 of the Criminal Cases (Punishment and Review) (Scotland) Bill, which purports to set a legal framework for disclosure of the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission's reasons for concluding that Megrahi's conviction might have amounted to a miscarriage of justice. The evidence session in question is provisionally scheduled for 7 February 2012.]
[It is not the petition (PE 1370) that the Justice Committee will be considering next month but Justice for Megrahi's evidence on Part 2 of the Criminal Cases (Punishment and Review) (Scotland) Bill, which purports to set a legal framework for disclosure of the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission's reasons for concluding that Megrahi's conviction might have amounted to a miscarriage of justice. The evidence session in question is provisionally scheduled for 7 February 2012.]
Mission Lockerbie - 2012:
ReplyDeleteIn order to obtain a political judgement, sometimes the collecting of main evidence must be bent...
by Edwin and Mahnaz Bollier, MEBO LTD Telecommunication Switzerland, URL: www.lockerbie.ch
In order to read proper comments here, you must take the risk of opening senseless, ever-repeated, out-of-context nonsense from MEBO.
ReplyDeleteThe programme spun 'a government adviser's words as an admission of guilt', but really they were no more than a 'claim of blame'!
ReplyDeleteYes he did it, Gaddafi, and Megrahi too. No doubt about it!
There was no new evidence of how they did it, but then again, there was no evidence to begin with.
Which is why after all the years of government lies and spin, this absence of evidence, should encourage people to go back to basics.
If they can lie about who did it, why not about, what caused it?