Belfast Telegraph

Lockerbie victim’s father hopes for ‘some truth’

- By Lucinda Cameron

THE father of a Lockerbie bombing victim has said he hopes “some truth will come out” after it emerged the US Justice Department expects to unseal charges in connection with the attack.

The bombing of Pan Am flight 103, travelling from London to New York on December 21, 1988, killed 270 people in Britain’s largest terrorist atrocity.

Former Libyan intelligen­ce officer Abdelbaset al-megrahi, who was found guilty in 2001 of mass murder and jailed for life with a minimum term of 27 years, was the only person convicted of the attack.

US media reports claim the country’s Justice Department expects to unseal charges in the coming days, with the Wall Street Journal and New York Times naming Abu Agila Mas’ud as the suspect.

Jim Swire, who l os t hi s daughter Flora in the attack, is convinced the late Megrahi was innocent.

He told BBC Breakfast: “My position has been difficult in that

I cannot bring myself to feel that the evidence we’ve heard so far does in fact point us towards the truth of who committed those 270 foul murders back in 1988.”

Asked whether he t hinks Mas’ud may be able to offer informatio­n, he said: “I cannot see how a connection can be made to the Lockerbie bombing with this guy, but it is quite possible that it may be.

“I do hope that with what’s going on at the moment, coming up to the 32nd anniversar­y of this awful business on Monday, that some truth will come out of what’s happening now.”

Mr Swire has spent more than three decades searching for answers over the death of his daughter, who boarded the flight on the eve of her 24th birthday.

He said: “My pursuit over this past 32 years has been for the truth about who murdered our lovely daughter Flora and why she wasn’t protected from the terrorist attack which had been copiously warned about in advance.

“I don’t feel confident that the material that was provided to indicate that the bomb had come from the hand of a Libyan in Malta was correct, I listened throughout the trial of that man and it seemed to me that the evidence did not support the verdict that was reached.”

Megrahi was released from prison in 2009 on compassion­ate grounds while terminally ill with cancer.

He returned to Libya and died in 2012.

 ??  ?? The wrecked nose section of the Pan-am Boeing 747 in Lockerbie
The wrecked nose section of the Pan-am Boeing 747 in Lockerbie

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