A commentary on the case of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, convicted of the murder of 270 people in the Pan Am 103 disaster.
Friday, 29 July 2016
Sheriffs involved in the Lockerbie case
Wednesday, 2 December 2020
The real perpetrators of Lockerbie bombing still to be brought to book
[This is the headline over a letter by Rev Dr John Cameron published on the website of the Belfast Telegraph on 1 December 2020. It reads as follows:]
In 1994 Nelson Mandela offered South Africa as a neutral venue for the Pan Am atrocity trial, but this was turned down by John Major.
His offer was also rejected by Tony Blair at the 1997 Commonwealth heads of government meeting in Edinburgh.
In words that still haunt our judiciary, Mandela warned “no one nation should be complainant, prosecutor and judge” in the Lockerbie case.
A life-long friend, the late Graham Cox, was Sheriff Principal of South Strathclyde, Dumfries and Galloway when Fhimah and Megrahi were arrested.
They appeared before him on April 6, 1999 at a makeshift Scottish court at Kamp Van Zeist in Holland.
In spite of his suspicion that the prosecution had arrested the wrong men, this court appearance starting off the subsequent legal proceedings.
Cox had no doubt the bombing resulted from the shooting down of Iran Air 655 by the USS Vincennes in July 1988, or that the Iranians recruited the PFLP-General Command.
Later, when Mandela asked the Kirk to intervene in a “serious miscarriage of justice”, Cox pointed me to the unsafe forensics, the unlikely use of a long-range timer and the fact that the bomb entered the system at Heathrow.
My report for the Kirk was used by Al Jazeera in a documentary which left no doubt of Megrahi’s innocence. [RB: Dr Cameron's report and the Al Jazeera documentary are referred to here, at the text accompanying footnote 46.]
Sadly, Cox warned against any hope that the verdict might be reversed.
Lord Fraser, then our senior law officer, had admitted the key witness Tony Gauci wasn’t “the full shilling”, had been paid $3m by the US and that the trial was a farce, but “nobody wants this can of worms opened”.
Sunday, 11 January 2015
First Scottish judge to meet Lockerbie accused dies
Graham Loudon Cox.
Lawyer.
Died: December 27, 2014.
Graham Cox, who has died aged 81, was a young army lawyer who went on to play a key role in the initial stages of the Lockerbie bombing case.
By then a veteran sheriff, who had already presided over the Lanarkshire Fatal Accident Inquiry into what was then the world's worst outbreak of E.coli, he was Sheriff Principal of the jurisdiction that covered the site of the atrocity and the first member of the Scottish judicial system to come into contact with the two Libyan suspects.
He sat on the bench at Camp Zeist, the temporary court set up in the Netherlands to hear the case of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi and Al-Amin Khalifa Fhimah, when they made their first appearance in private there on April 6, 1999. The pair, alleged to be behind the 1988 blowing up of Pan-Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie which left 270 dead, faced charges of conspiracy, murder and violations of aviation laws.
The following week, April 14, Sheriff Principal Cox committed them for trial, a court case from which the reverberations still echo, more than a quarter of a century after the bombing. Fhimah was acquitted in 2001. Megrahi was convicted of the killings and sentenced to life imprisonment. He maintained his innocence and died of cancer in 2012 after being released on compassionate grounds.
Tuesday, 14 April 2015
Megrahi and Fhimah committed for trial 16 years ago today
Sunday, 5 April 2015
Our confidence in our innocence has no bounds
Monday, 6 April 2015
A friendly transfer
Wednesday, 5 April 2017
Lockerbie trial: enter the accused
Sunday, 6 May 2018
Scottish prosecutors in secret meeting with Libyans about al‑Megrahi and Lockerbie
reads in part:]
A clandestine meeting between the Crown Office and Libyan officials has taken place as part
The Sunday Times has learnt that Scottish prosecutors want to interview at least one suspect
It is understood the suspect may be linked to the purchase of a suitcase that concealed the
bomb. The Crown maintains that the suitcase was loaded onto a plane in Malta and
transferred onto Pan Am flight 103, which took off from Heathrow for New York. (...)
Scottish prosecutors maintain that Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi, who was accused of buying
his accomplices to justice. Megrahi is the only person convicted of the bombing.
According to a diplomatic source, Libyan officials visited the UK at the invitation of
“Megrahi is regarded as unfinished business because the inquests determined that he
“Investigators have been looking at the people who were involved in the purchase of
leads which still need to be fully explored.”
He added: “Police Scotland have been pursuing the possibility of questioning
will be looking to the prosecutor [to see] if they can be tracked down and interviewed
on their behalf.”
The disclosure follows a decision by the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission
The SCCRC said last week that it was in “the interests of justice” to accept the
believe Megrahi was innocent. A separate police investigation into claims that
prosecutors, police and forensic officials perverted the course of justice is expected
to conclude shortly.
The Crown Office declined to comment.
[RB: A comment by John Cameron under this article on The Sunday Times website reads as follows:]
My Italian friends were deeply embarrassed by the judicial shenanigans of the Meredith
But the fact is the Italian system was self-correcting and in the end, the manifestly innocent
students Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito were released.
The conviction of Abdelbaset Al-Megrahi for the Pan Am bombing raised a similar international
the Scottish churches, from his prison inmates and staff to every journalist who investigated
the case, no-one believed he was guilty.
Megrahi and co-defendant Lamin Fhimah were remanded into custody by my dear old friend, the late Sheriff Graham Cox in whose jurisdiction Lockerbie lay. He later confided, "I'm sure they've got the wrong men" adding that in the event of a miscarriage of justice, the Scottish judiciary was "too small and too inbred" to sort it out.
We shall see!