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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Pan
Am 103 / Lockerbie
Britain: Veteran Labour MP challenges destruction of Lockerbie
evidence
By Steve James
1 April 2002
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Tam Dalyell, the Labour MP for the Scottish constituency of
Linlithgow, used his parliamentary privileges to effectively accuse
the British government of destroying evidence relating to the
criminal investigation of the 1988 attack on PanAm flight 103,
which killed 270 people.
Dalyell is the longest serving MP in Westminsterthe so-called
father of the house. Something of a maverick figure,
he has a long record of raising awkward questions for successive
British administrations. Dalyell harried Conservative Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher for years over the circumstances surrounding
the sinking of an elderly Argentine warship, General Belgrano,
off the Malvinas/Falklands Islands, by a British nuclear submarine
during the 1982 war with Argentina.
Speaking on March 26, in an adjournment debate in which MPs
can raise whatever they like, Dalyell insisted that Libyan Abdel
Basset al-Megrahi, currently jailed for life in Barlinnie prison
in Glasgow for the Lockerbie attack, was innocent. Dalyell, who
has long followed developments around the Lockerbie disaster,
asked what was being done to preserve evidence collected during
police enquiries. He went on to ask, Can an assurance be
given that they will not be destroyed in the same way as certain
police notebooks have apparently been destroyed?
Dalyell quoted a statement given by a retired policewoman,
Mary Boylan, who had been based at Lockerbie in 1988. In 1999
Boylan was asked to give a statement at Livingston Police Station,
presumably relating to the upcoming trial of al-Megrahi and his
then co-accused, Al Amin Khalifa Fhimah. She asked for her notebooks
from 1988 to refresh her memory. She was told they could not be
found and later read in the Scottish press that Lothian and Borders
Police had destroyed the notebooks.
Dalyell asked, Who gave the instruction for the destruction
of notebooks? After all, this was the biggest unresolved murder
trial in Scottish legal history. The answer to that question is
likely to be found not in Edinburgh, but in London.
Dalyell said he had worked closely with five heads of the polices
F Division which covers West Lothian, as well as successive
chief constables of Lothian and Borders Police: I simply
do not believe that any one of them, off their own bat, would
have allowed, for reasons of routine and storage space, the destruction
of notebooks relating to the biggest murder trial in Scottish
history.
Dalyell quoted a subsequent statement from Boylan in which
she described how, in 1999, she attended Dumfries police station
and was asked to describe a suitcase rim, with a handle attached.
Boylan asked the Procurator Fiscal, a local Scottish legal official,
about the significance of the case. He would not say, but, What
he did say was that the owner of said suitcase was a Joseph Patrick
Curry and that I would be hearing and reading a lot about him
at the time of the trial. Boylan later found out that Curry
was a US Army Special Forces Captain.
According to Dalyell, Boylan claims a colleague informed her
that Currys suitcase contained the bomb that blew up the
aircraft. Dalyell said, I want to know who will verify the
statement and show whether it is true or false. If the bomb was
in Currys suitcase, Mr. Megrahi is hardly likely to be guilty.
He concluded by asking for these extremely serious matters
[to] be taken on board by the government in London.
Speaking after the debate Dalyell reiterated his suggestion
that something highly irregular has taken place, apparently
with consent.
Joseph Patrick Curry was one of several members of a US Special
Forces team on PanAm 103, whose luggage, and remains at the crash
site were the subject of a great deal of well documented US CIA
and FBI activity in the hours and days after the disaster. A special
forces major, Charles McKee, and the CIAs Beirut station
deputy chief, Matthew Gannon, also died on the plane.
Click
here for Dalyells statement as recorded in Hansard, the
House of Parliaments official record.
See Also:
Pan Am 103/Lockerbie: Appeal
against guilty verdict thrown out
[22 March 2002]
Pan Am 103/Lockerbie
verdict politically motivated
[7 February 2001]
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