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Pan Am 103/Lockerbie: Appeal against guilty verdict thrown
out
By Steve James
22 March 2002
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Five senior Scottish judges at Camp Zeist, the Netherlands,
have thrown out the appeal by Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi
against his conviction, January 2001 for the mass murder of 270
people killed at Lockerbie on December 21, 1988. Al-Megrahi has
now been transported to Glasgows notorious BarLinnie prison,
where a special wing has been built for him to serve his 20-year
sentence.
Scotlands leading legal officials have fully defended
a conviction based on flimsy and contested circumstantial evidence
that has been criticised by several observers as a miscarriage
of justice. One of five United Nations observers to the Lockerbie
trial, Hans Koechler has previously criticised the initial verdict.
Having sat through the entire trial and the appeal, he told BBC
Radio Scotland, I am sorry to admit that my impression is
that justice was not done and that we are dealing here with a
rather spectacular case of a miscarriage of justice... Frankly
speaking I am not convinced. I was not convinced when I read the
opinion of the court after the trial last year and I was not convinced
when I went through the text presented today. I am not convinced
at all that the sequence of events that led to this explosion
of the plane over Scotland was as described by the court. Everything
that is presented is only circumstantial evidence. Koechler
said he believed other members of the UN team shared his concerns.
Speaking later, Dr Jim Swires, whose daughter, Flora, was killed
in the explosion said, We think there has been miscarriage
of justice. Thank God that Britain does not have the death penalty.
Swires reiterated the long-standing call of several relatives
of Lockerbie victims for a public inquiry that has real
authority to be convened.
Professor Robert Black, the lawyer who has worked closely with
the relatives for many years and the architect of the trial process
itself, also described the trial as a miscarriage of justice.
He told the Scotsman, We have not seen the end of
this case... There is a hell of lot of more evidence that appeared
neither at the trial or the appeal.
In contrast to the alarm felt by close observers of the trial,
many of Scotlands leading politicians showed an indecent
haste to support an appeal decision they can hardly have had the
time to read.
Scottish Justice Minister Jim Wallace claimed, Everyone
will have breathed a collective sigh of relief at the decision
of the appeal judges. Scottish National Party justice spokesman
Roseanna Cunningham announced, This unique trial has shown
the Scottish justice system to be robust and effective in the
eyes of the worldright from the actions of the police officers
investigating the immediate aftermath of this terrible crime up
to todays verdict.
Based on the evidence presented at the Lockerbie trial and
the subsequent appeal, it is impossible to say with certainty
which persons, movements or governments were responsible for the
destruction of Pan Am flight 103. Libya could have been responsible
for the bombing, but a number of alternative scenarios have been
presentedfrom the involvement of Palestinian groups to direct
allegations of CIA involvement. What has become clear is that
the assertion that al-Megrahi planted the bomb in Luqa airport
in Malta that blew up PA103 is based on deeply problematic circumstantial
evidence. Moreover, the case against him is contradicted by somewhat
stronger circumstantial evidence pointing to the bombs insertion
into the plane at Frankfurt or Heathrow airports.
Despite this, in a 200-page verdict, the five judges, led by
Lord Cullen, rejected all but the most minor of the appeal teams
questioning of the numerous holes in the prosecution case. Explaining
their decision, the appeal judges claimed they had no right
to comment on the initial verdict. Where some comment became unavoidable,
they always defended the trial judges line of reasoning,
on the basis it was not for an appeal to re-evaluate the original
evidence. In only a small number of instances they accepted there
might have been mistakes, but insisted that these errors had no
impact on the final outcome.
The appeal court concluded that new evidence, highlighted in
the press, that there had been a break-in at Heathrow airport,
near the luggage area, the night before PA103 took off for New
York, had no bearing on the verdict. While the court accepted
there had been a break-in, there was a significant degree of confusion
over the movement and positioning of cases that answered the description
of the Samsonite suitcase supposedly containing the bomb, and
that there was evidence suggesting that it had arrived in a luggage
container by unknown means, it concluded that this did not constitute
circumstantial evidence strong enough to overcome the assertion
that the bomb case was loaded at Luqa.
The appeal court accepted that the judges misdirected themselves
when they stated that the records showing 13.10 as the time when
luggage destined for PA103 (a feeder flight from Frankfurt to
London) was processed. The appeal judges agreed that they had
no basis to prefer this to the 13.16 suggested as an alternative
time by the defencethe record itself is difficult to read.
Flights from several aircraft were being processed at Frankfurt
at the time, and a six-minute difference significantly increases
the window through which luggage from flights other than KM180
from Luqa in Malta could have been processed for transfer to PA103A.
The judges found that in the end, nothing could be concluded from
this and the misdirection... had no material consequences
to the appellants interest.
The judges considered the evidence of Maltese shopkeeper Tony
Gauci, who provided the only visual identification of al-Megrahi
as having been associated with clothes that were found, charred,
at the crash site, and were thought to be in the same suitcase
as the bomb. Gaucis evidence was upheld despite numerous
discrepancies over the date, time, weather, which football matches
were on the television and even whether or not Christmas decorations
were up. No significance was attached to the fact that Gauci had
previously identified a member of a Palestinian group, Abu Talb,
currently serving a sentence for bomb attacks for which he does
not deny responsibility.
What is undeniable is that there were significant political
pressures on the court to uphold the initial trial verdict, whatever
evidence was presented in al-Megrahis defence.
Libya has been the focus of US-inspired sanctions and sustained
aggression for 16 years. In 1990, blame for the Lockerbie attack
was shifted by the Scottish investigating authorities and the
US government to Libya and away from the countries initially targeted
for suspicion such as Iran and Syria. At the time, Iranian and
Syrian acquiescence in the first US attack on Iraq in 1991 was
considered imperative. Indeed, US Secretary of State James Baker
had been shuttling around the region prior to the sudden discovery
of evidence supposedly linking the attack to Libya.
In the intervening years, Lockerbie has been continually utilised
to justify US and UN sanctions against Libyan state terrorism.
As a result successive administrations have invested a great deal
of political capital in their insistence that Libya was responsible
for the bombing.
However, relations with Libya have improved in recent years
as Colonel Gaddaffi has made repeated overtures to the Western
powers. In Britain, the election victory of Tony Blair in 1997
was seen as a chance to remove the main political obstacle to
renewed friendly relations with a country whose oil reserves its
European rivals were exploiting.
A limited trial of the two defendantsal-Megrahi and Al
Amin Khalifa Fhimahwas offered, provided that more general
attacks on Libya were downplayed. The US government was reluctant
to agree to such a compromise, but was eventually persuaded. American
business was also anxious to exploit Libyan oil, and was caught
in the contradiction created by years of anti-Libya propaganda
and the lust for oil profit. There was also concern that some
of the secret activities of the CIA and FBI would be exposed to
public scrutiny and US intelligence operatives sat on the prosecution
benches through much of the trial proceedings in order to offset
this danger. Even so, the CIAs star witness
in the case, Abdul Majid Giacka, was exposed as a fraud and the
case against the two accused Libyans suffered repeated setbacks.
The verdict against al-Megrahihis alleged sole accomplice
Al Amin Khalifa Fhimah was acquittedwas the minimum requirement
for the US. Libyan guilt and compensation payments to victims,
already agreed by Gaddaffi, provided retrospective justification
for years of punitive sanctions. At the same time the relatively
low-key conclusionwith just one person deemed to be directly
responsiblewould allow Conoco, Marathon, Amerada Hess, and
Occidental to develop a lucrative relationship with the Libyan
National Oil Corporation.
See Also:
Pan Am 103 / Lockerbie
verdict politically motivated
[7 February 2001]
Pan Am
103/Lockerbie
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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