Yorkshire Post

Family’s bid to appeal Lockerbie bomber’s conviction in top court fails

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JUDGES HAVE refused the Lockerbie bomber’s family permission to take an appeal against his conviction to the UK’s highest court.

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 was found guilty in 2001 of mass murder and jailed for life – the only person convicted of the attack.

In January, judges at the Court of Appeal in Edinburgh rejected a third appeal against his conviction, which was made by his son. Lawyers for the Megrahi family then sought permission to appeal to the UK Supreme Court, but this was refused.

Aamer Anwar, the family’s lawyer, said they will now seek leave to appeal to the UK Supreme Court, the final court of appeal. A written judgment by Lord Carloway, the Lord Justice General, said the court “has had some difficulty in understand­ing the exact nature of the challenge”.

It said: “Although the case is clearly one of public importance, the proposed grounds of appeal do not raise points of law of general public importance.

The principles of law which the court applied were all well known, settled and largely uncontrove­rsial in the appeal.”

Megrahi was released from prison in 2009 on compassion­ate grounds while terminally ill with cancer, and died in Libya in 2012.

The third appeal was lodged after the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission referred the case to the High Court in 2020, ruling a possible miscarriag­e of justice may have occurred.

Judges then granted his son, Ali al-Megrahi, permission to appeal in relation to the argument “no reasonable jury” could have returned the verdict the court did, and on the grounds of non-disclosure of documents by the Crown. Appeal court judges rejected both grounds of appeal.

Ali Al-Megrahi, son of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, said: “It is time for a new Libya, but that will never happen until there is justice for those who died in Lockerbie. I regard my father Abdelbaset Al-Megrahi as the 271st victim of Lockerbie.”

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