Daily Mail

Revealed, a second new Lockerbie blast suspect

US ‘to charge spy chief who was Gaddafi’s brother-in-law’

- By Larisa Brown Defence and Security Editor

A SECOND new suspect in the Lockerbie bombing has been unearthed by US prosecutor­s as they prepare to charge the suspected bombmaker, the Daily Mail can reveal.

The American authoritie­s are set to request the extraditio­n of former Libyan intelligen­ce officer Abu Agila Mohammad Masud in connection with the attack, which killed 270 people in 1988.

But the Mail can reveal that the Libyan government believe US investigat­ors also have fresh evidence linking a second suspect to the atrocity.

Abdullah al-Senussi, the former intelligen­ce chief and brother-in-law of toppled dictator Colonel Muammar Gadd

‘He was a ghost, a phantom’

afi, is being examined in the latest probe. He was nicknamed ‘the butcher’ because of his reputation for brutal behaviour and was sentenced to death by firing squad in Libya but remains alive in prison.

It is understood both men are in jail in Tripoli where most former members of the Gaddafi regime are held.

The US Justice Department is due to unseal new charges in connection with the attack within days.

Mohammed Ali Abdallah, a senior adviser to the Libyan government on US affairs, said: ‘I am aware that US prosecutor­s have re-opened the investigat­ion, and are focused on two individual­s with regards to their role in the Lockerbie case.

‘The US prosecutor­s have indicated that they have new evidence that links these two men to the bombing of the PanAm 103 flight.’

He said there had been no formal request for extraditio­n yet.

The FBI were put on Masud’s trail by Boston documentar­y maker Ken Dornstein, whose brother David was on the doomed flight. Mr Dornstein spent more than ten years going back over files, tracking down retired investigat­ors and following leads and tip-offs.

Some, he said, did not believe Masud, alleged to have been Gaddafi’s top explosives expert, was a real person.

Mr Dornstein told Radio 4’s Today programme: ‘He was essentiall­y a ghost, he was a phantom.’

But he said a long search through documents had enabled him to match Masud to another case. He said: ‘I realised that Masud wasn’t a ghost, he was a bomb expert and he was involved in many cases.’

He spoke to a man involved in another case in Germany, the 1986 bombing of a Berlin bar, who told him of Masud’s involvemen­t in Lockerbie and confirmed he was still alive.

Having taken his journalist­ic endeavours as far as he could, Mr Dornstein passed this informatio­n to the FBI.

The Wall Street Journal said the case against Masud is based largely on a confession he gave Libyan authoritie­s in 2012, which was turned over to Scottish authoritie­s in 2017, as well as travel and immigratio­n records.

Former Libyan intelligen­ce officer Abdelbaset al-Megrahi is the only person so far convicted over the attack, although some have their doubts of his involvemen­t.

He was found guilty in 2001 of mass murder and jailed at a Scottish court for life. When he was given compassion­ate release in 2009 after being diagnosed with advanced prostate cancer, Megrahi received a hero’s welcome in Libya. He died in 2012.

Among those to greet him at the airport was Senussi, Libya’s spy chief at the time of the attack, it is alleged.

The new charges are expected to be announced by outgoing US attorney general, William Barr, who held the same position when the US announced its first charges against Megrahi and another Libyan suspect, later acquitted, in 1991.

Jim Swire, who lost his daughter Flora in the attack, said he still held out hope for answers.

He told BBC Breakfast: ‘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.’

A panel of five appeal judges in Edinburgh are currently deliberati­ng whether to acquit Megrahi after the conclusion of the third appeal against his conviction last month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom