Scottish Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill
personally urged the man convicted of the Lockerbie bombing to drop his appeal
as a way of helping his compassionate release from prison, a new book claims
today.
The
authorised biography of Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al Megrahi reveals for the first
time that the minister responsible for deciding whether he would return to
Libya actively encouraged Megrahi to give up his case in the appeal court,
telling a senior Libyan minister in a private meeting in Edinburgh that
"it would be easier for him to grant compassionate release if I dropped my
appeal".
By
doing so, the Scottish legal system was spared further scrutiny over a case
which many observers believe was based on a fundamental miscarriage of justice.
The Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission had already highlighted six
grounds for suggesting Megrahi's conviction for the murder of 270 people at
Lockerbie was unsafe.
The
book, released this morning at a press conference in Edinburgh, contains the
most explicit account of the extraordinary events leading up to Megrahi's
controversial release on compassionate grounds in August 2009, which divided
public opinion across the world and brought a storm of criticism, particularly
from US officials and relatives.
Megrahi,
who has prostate cancer, was said to have only three months to live, but is
still alive more than two years later.
In
the book he writes: "On 10 August (2009), MacAskill and his senior civil
servants met a delegation of Libyan officials, including Minister [Abdel Ati]
Al-Obeidi. By this time I was desperate.
"After
the meeting the Libyan delegation came to the prison to visit me. Obeidi said
that, towards the end of the meeting, MacAskill had asked to speak to him in
private. Once the others had withdrawn, MacAskill told him it would be easier
for him to grant compassionate release if I dropped my appeal. He [MacAskill]
said he was not demanding that I do so, but the message seemed to me to be
clear. I was legally entitled to continue the appeal, but I could not risk
doing so. It meant abandoning my quest for justice."
The Herald
has previously reported diplomatic meetings at which it was revealed that
Megrahi would have to drop his appeal to allow the controversial Prisoner
Transfer Agreement (PTA) brokered by Westminster after Tony Blair's infamous
deal in the desert to ensure UK-Libyan trade links were restored.
Ultimately,
Mr MacAskill turned down the application under the PTA signed by the UK
Government and Libya, but granted compassionate release instead, for which the
status of Megrahi's appeal should have been irrelevant.
Neither
Mr MacAskill nor the Scottish Government has been contacted in advance of the
book's publication, but the Justice Secretary has previously denied any
interference with the legal process. In 2009, Mr MacAskill said Megrahi’s
decision to withdraw his second appeal against conviction was "a matter
for him and the courts", adding: "My decisions were predicated on the
fact that he was properly investigated, a lawful conviction passed and a life
sentence imposed."
However,
Megrahi: You Are My Jury, the new book by John Ashton, a former member of the
defence team, suggests a direct link between compassionate release and Megrahi
dropping his appeal, apparently to protect the reputation of the Scottish
justice system after a verdict seen by many as deeply flawed.
Mr
Ashton told heraldscotland: "The
Justice Secretary and his officials should, at all times, have made it clear to
Mr Megrahi and his representatives that, if he chose to continue his appeal, it
would have had no bearing on the justice secretary’s decision on whether or not
to grant compassionate release.
"Furthermore,
they should have been aware that, given Mr Megrahi's desperate position, even
the slightest pressure that was applied would have caused him to abandon the
appeal, even though he was not legally obliged to do so. Of course, by dropping
the appeal he spared the Scottish criminal justice system a colossal
embarrassment."
The
book contains a number of revelations pertaining to new evidence and previously
unseen documents and information. It is based on interviews with Megrahi and
the full report of the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission which referred
the case back for a fresh appeal in June 2007 on six different grounds. The
commission's full report has never been published.
Although
the appeal was granted in 2007, its start was significantly delayed. The
defence team, and the new book, claim that the delays could be blamed on the
Crown Office, and that many of them were unnecessary. The Crown denied such
claims at the time.
However,
it was widely agreed that for the appeal to go ahead and for Megrahi to be
acquitted of the worst terrorist atrocity to have taken place on mainland
Britain would have been a devastating and embarrassing blow to the Scottish
legal system, the police investigation, the Crown and judiciary.
What
the new book lays bare is just how much new evidence there was to secure
Megrahi’s acquittal and just how likely it was if the appeal had gone ahead.
One
of the most significant revelations the defence team learned just before he
dropped the appeal concerned a fundamental part of the prosecution’s case
against Megrahi: that a fragment of circuit board supposed to confirm that the
timer used to detonate the Lockerbie bomb came from a Swiss company linked to
Megrahi and which allegedly sold 20 such timers only to Libya did not, in fact,
match the circuit boards made by this company.
The
book also raises serious questions about the reliability of the Crown’s key
witnesses and reveals major inconsistencies in statements and forensics
evidence.
Megrahi
describes his decision to drop the appeal as a "terrible choice to have to
make". He writes: "I never doubted that, if they considered the
evidence objectively, the appeal judges would overturn the conviction. From
that moment I made that decision, I was determined that, if I could not be
judged in a court of law, then I should be judged in the court of public
opinion. This book presents the case for both the prosecution and the defence.”
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