Belfast Telegraph

The real perpetrato­rs of Lockerbie bombing still to be brought to book

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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.

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”.

REV DR JOHN CAMERON

St Andrews, Fife

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