The Scotsman

Lockerbie bomber release focused world’s attention on Holyrood

The controvers­ial release of Abdelbaset al-megrahi saw Holyrood scrutinise­d like never before

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The decision to release from prison the only man ever convicted of the 1989 Lockerbie bombing remains perhaps the single most controvers­ial moment in the Scottish Parliament’s first two decades.

Then justice minister Kenny Macaskill told MSPS on August 20, 2009, that Abdelbaset al-megrahi would the next day be released on compassion­ate grounds from HM Prison Greenock after serving just eight-and-a-half-years of a life sentence.

The release prompted a furious response from many opposition politician­s across the UK. David Mundell, then shadow Scottish secretary, described it as “a mistake of internatio­nal proportion­s”.

But the biggest reaction came from the United States. Of the 270 victims of the Lockerbie bombing, 190 were American citizens.

No decision taken by a Scottish minister had ever been scrutinise­d by the world’s media in such a way before. Events at Holyrood were not normally condemned by the US Government.

Macaskill informed the parliament that al-megrahi would be freed on compassion­ate grounds and allowed to return home to Libya after being diagnosed the previous year with prostate cancer.

“I am conscious that there are deeply held feelings, and that many will disagree whatever my decision,” he said.

“However, Mr Al-megrahi now faces a sentence imposed by a higher power. It is one that no court, in any jurisdicti­on, in any land, could revoke or overrule.

It is terminal, final and irrevocabl­e. He is going to die.”

Many in Scotland and across the UK had long harboured doubts regarding al-megrahi’s conviction in 2001 by a special Scottish court sitting in the Netherland­s. The decision to release him was only the latest chapter in a long-running legal battle

which began on that fateful night in December 1989.

But those doubts were never shared by the majority of victims’ families in the US.

“I don’t know what his political future will be, but the name ‘Macaskill’ will go down in history for his role in a miscarriag­e of justice,” said Frank Duggan, a US lawyer who chaired the Victims of Flight 103 group.

There was considerab­le anger at the nature of al-megrahi’s release on compassion­ate grounds. The Libyan had always denied his involvemen­t in the bombing, which some interprete­d as a refusal to acknowledg­e his crimes.

“Mr Al-megrahi now faces a sentence imposed by a higher power... It is terminal, final and irrevocabl­e. He is going to die”

Susan Cohen, whose daughter Theodora was one of many students killed on the flight, said: “This has been despicable. He was convicted of mass murder, but you’ve let him out on the most sickening grounds possible.”

Then US President Barack Obama condemned the decision at the time and doubled-down on his comments almost a year later when David Cameron first visited the White House as prime minister.

“All of us here in the US were surprised and disappoint­ed and angry about the release of the Lockerbie bomber,” said Mr Obama. “My administra­tion expressed very clearly the objections both prior and subsequent­ly.

“The bottom line is that we (the US and UK Government­s] all disagree with it. It was a very poor decision and one that ran not only contrary to how we should be treating terrorists but didn’t reflect the pain that the families still suffer to this day.

“This was a heartbreak­ing decision for them that opened a whole host of new wounds.”

Al-megrahi was convicted following one of the most complex trials ever staged. He was sentenced to 27 years, while his co-accused was cleared. His lawyers then successful­ly applied to the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission and the case was referred back to the Court of Appeal in 2007.

Over a year later he was diagnosed with prostate cancer. By the time his second appeal got under way, his condition had deteriorat­ed.

A few weeks later an applicatio­n to have him transferre­d to serve the rest of his sentence in Libya was lodged, and at the same time al-megrahi applied to be freed on compassion­ate grounds because of his health.

He died in 2012, maintainin­g his innocence until the last.

 ??  ?? 0 Abdelbaset al-megrahi, second left, being greeted on his arrival in Tripoli on 20 August, 2009 after his release
0 Abdelbaset al-megrahi, second left, being greeted on his arrival in Tripoli on 20 August, 2009 after his release

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