Gulf Today

Tributes offered to police officer shot dead 40 years ago

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LONDON: Hundreds of people atended a vigil in central London on Wednesday to commemorat­e the life of a police officer who was shot dead 40 years ago from inside the Libyan embassy in the British capital.

Constable Yvonne Fletcher, 25, was killed when men armed with submachine guns fired from the embassy’s windows while she was policing a demonstrat­ion outside the building against the regime of then-libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi.

Atendees laid flowers at the base of a memorial at the site where Fletcher died. The ceremony ended with the release of seven white doves in tribute to the slain police officer.

No one has been brought to justice for the death of Fletcher, even though campaigner­s, including her colleague John Murray, won a victory in a civil case at Britain’s High Court three years ago. A judge ruled that a former Libyan minister, Saleh Ibrahim Mabrouk, had been “jointly liable” for the plan to use violence during the anti-government protest, though he didn’t fire any shots Mabrouk, who denied responsibi­lity, had been arrested in London in 2015 but the case was dropped two years later by prosecutor­s because key evidence had to be kept secret on national security grounds. He was barred from the UK in 2019 over his suspected involvemen­t in war crimes, and is believed to be in Libya.

Murray, who cradled Fletcher as she lay dying and promised to find those responsibl­e for her murder, said Wednesday at the memorial that campaigner­s have launched a fundraisin­g campaign for a private criminal prosecutio­n and a request for Mabrouk’s extraditio­n to the UK to stand trial.

“The terrorist murder of Yvonne Fletcher 40 years ago... was one of the worst atrocities executed by Gadhafi,” he said. “Justice is what we will get for a fallen colleague because we will never and can never forget her.” Gadhafi, whose regime was linked to a number of terrorist acts, was killed by opposition fighters in 2011 during the Nato-backed Arab Spring, ending his fourdecade rule of Libya. The north African country has been divided between rival administra­tions and beset by militia conflict ever since.

London’s Metropolit­an Police said there are currently no active lines of inquiry and the likelihood of finding further evidence remains low. However, it said the murder investigat­ion will never be closed and any relevant new informatio­n that comes to light will be assessed and investigat­ed further.

“She had her whole career and her whole life ahead of her,” said Mark Rowley, the commission­er for the Met.

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