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BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?

Peter K (Fionn) 13 Aug 09 - 09:16 AM
Paco Rabanne 13 Aug 09 - 11:22 AM
SINSULL 13 Aug 09 - 01:02 PM
heric 13 Aug 09 - 04:40 PM
Peter K (Fionn) 13 Aug 09 - 05:41 PM
Megan L 13 Aug 09 - 05:48 PM
Paco Rabanne 13 Aug 09 - 06:09 PM
McGrath of Harlow 13 Aug 09 - 06:32 PM
McGrath of Harlow 13 Aug 09 - 06:39 PM
Folkiedave 13 Aug 09 - 06:40 PM
Eric the Viking 13 Aug 09 - 06:47 PM
Paco Rabanne 13 Aug 09 - 06:49 PM
catspaw49 13 Aug 09 - 07:03 PM
McGrath of Harlow 13 Aug 09 - 07:23 PM
SINSULL 13 Aug 09 - 07:55 PM
SINSULL 13 Aug 09 - 07:55 PM
Peter K (Fionn) 13 Aug 09 - 09:01 PM
SINSULL 13 Aug 09 - 09:34 PM
heric 13 Aug 09 - 11:11 PM
goatfell 14 Aug 09 - 03:58 AM
Eric the Viking 14 Aug 09 - 06:50 PM
DougR 14 Aug 09 - 07:52 PM
McGrath of Harlow 14 Aug 09 - 07:53 PM
goatfell 14 Aug 09 - 08:44 PM
DougR 15 Aug 09 - 01:28 AM
goatfell 15 Aug 09 - 08:59 AM
Peter K (Fionn) 15 Aug 09 - 09:13 AM
DougR 15 Aug 09 - 04:05 PM
Peace 15 Aug 09 - 07:09 PM
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Subject: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Peter K (Fionn)
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 09:16 AM

Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi, the only person convicted of involvement in the Lockerbie bombing, could soon be free. BBC report.

He is in prison in Scotland, terminally ill, and his release would be in order that he can be back with his family in Libya when he dies. An alternative would be to transfer him to a Libyan prison to complete his sentence, but that would require him to abandon an appeal against conviction which has been recommended by the Criminal Cases Review Commission in Scotland.

A New Jersey woman whose daughter died in the atrocity, said in a tv interview today that his potential release was the best argument she had ever heard for the death penalty. In the BBC report linked above, she said: "It makes me sick, and if there is a compassionate release then I think that is vile." "Vile" seems a strange way to describe an act of compassion, but other victim relatives in the US have reacted in much the same vein.

UK relatives, on the other hand, seem in the main to be relaxed about Megrahi's release, not least because many of them have serious doubts, as do many senior lawyers, about his guilt. Even if he was rightly convicted, they are of the view that he was at best a minor player whose conviction put paid to any serious quest to find those who masterminded the crime. (I don't think anyone anywhere thinks Megrahi acted alone, and there are many who think the crime should be laid at Iran's door rather than Libya's.)

Dischord within the relatives' group does not precisely follow the US/UK divide, but overwhelmingly that is where the faultline runs. The American voices I heard today sounded to me embittered, shrill and slightly irrational. Jim Swire and another Brit I saw interviewed sounded thoughtful and measured by comparison, and even... compassionate.

A comlex dilemma for Scotland's justice minister.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Paco Rabanne
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 11:22 AM

Give me a gun,I'd shoot the bugger right now.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: SINSULL
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 01:02 PM

I have to agree that the article made the US victims' families sound bent on vengeance vs.the UK familes who seem to think he may be innocent. Made me wonder if the writer has an axe to grind.
Politicians on both sides of the ocean lie. I wonder what this is really about - certainly not a humanitarian gesture to get him home for Ramadan because he has cancer. That I don't buy. I also don't believe that this "leak" was not arranged for any other reason than to see if public opinion will crucify the person who makes the final decision.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: heric
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 04:40 PM

I think I'd be embittered, shrill and slightly irrational if a guy deliberately blew up my daughter. It's only logical.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Peter K (Fionn)
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 05:41 PM

Maybe I would be too, heric (though I hope not). But I would certainly be a little bit concerned to know whether anyone convicted was actually guilty as charged.

One of the New Jersey woman's more idiotic remarks to a BBC interviewer was "Why don't you show some sympathy for ME?" To which Jim Swire, who was in the same discussion and who lost his daughter in the Lockerbie atrocity, asked how it could possibly help her if a potentially innocent man was made to die in prison. Her response was to say that her daughter had not been killed by a UFO, as Jim Swire obviously believed. Presumably that's where Paco Rabanne's coming from too. God almighty.

Sinsull, who thinks the BBC has an axe to grind, should do what very few in the US seem to have done and take a look at the case against Megrahi. It is wafer thin. And is Sinsull saying that the words attributed to American and British relatives have been distorted in some way?

For many Americans, and alas for many Brits too, such trivial considerations as the establishing of guilt beyond doubt are secondary to the thirst for revenge on any terms. But surely justice should rise above gut instincts and set itself a higher bar. Or are we supposed to abandon all civilised values in the face of crimes against us, and resort to an eye for an eye?

Why are American families of the victims not fighting, as many of the British families are, to find out why Britain and America are content to see a single individual jailed when it is crystal clear to both governments - as it was to the court that convicted Megrahi - that even if guilty he was far from being the atrocity's mastermind? Frankly those unquestioning families are acquitting themselves like an army of the brain-dead.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Megan L
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 05:48 PM

When we are hurt we want to hurt. Greater by far is my admiration for Gordon Wilson the father of Marie Wilson a young nurse who was killed in the bombing of the war memorial at Eniskillen he had the courage few of us could show the courage to forgive.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Paco Rabanne
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 06:09 PM

Peter K,
       That is a glorious example of mudcat obfuscation! A Libyan was convicted in open court, at great expense to the British taxpaxpayer. As usual the only people who benefitted were solicitors.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 06:32 PM

But convicted on very shaky evidence indeed. Courts convict innocent people from time to time, including British courts.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 06:39 PM

In any case, I'd have thought that, if it's a matter of vengeance, to have the object of that vengeance imprisoned for the rest of his life until just before he dies of cancer would be more satisfying than a swift execution.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Folkiedave
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 06:40 PM

The names Sean Hodgson and Stehpen Downing come to mind.

They were convicted at great expense to the British taxpayer. They will now be compensated at equally great expense to the British taxpayer.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Eric the Viking
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 06:47 PM

Oddly enough.......... two summers ago (early September) I was fishing off a jetty with my son in Scapa when we were joined by this well dresssed man who had parked his big posh merc near my car. We got chatting and fishing, he was asking me about life up here and what my job was, I told him and asked him. He was a barrister. He was up here examining evidence and taking new statements about the Michael Ross case for a prosecution case later in the year. But he was mostly working on the Lockerbie bombers' appeal and had been for quite a while. He told me that there was much evidence and lots of concealed evidence that convinced him and his team that the bomber was the "fall guy". He was talking about big bribes paid to people to alter their stories and the involvement of the CIA. We chatted and fished. Time passed as it does. He told me that just the money he had made so far from the Lockerbie case was well into 6 figures. He was sure that the appeal would be heard and freedom granted. I never saw him again.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Paco Rabanne
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 06:49 PM

Lionel Hutz move over... Smith and Wesson 38? two shots.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: catspaw49
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 07:03 PM

If so many think he is a patsy, than there should be evidence available for a retrial or at least a review of the actual case with that new info by an appeals judge. Or hell, let him out.......say about a week before he might die and then give him a ten spot and a bus ticket.

There's more to this.....I'm with Sinsull......

Spaw


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 07:23 PM

There is indeed evidence justifying an appeal (and this has been recommended by the Criminal Cases Review Commission in Scotland), and if Megrahi lives long enough there should be one, unless the government manages to stop it happening.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: SINSULL
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 07:55 PM

Re-read my post PeterK. You too seem hell bent on distotion.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: SINSULL
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 07:55 PM

distortion.
Sorry - typo.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Peter K (Fionn)
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 09:01 PM

Made me wonder if the writer has an axe to grind.

I couldn't see the writer's opinions in evidence, Sinsull. The quotes speak for themselves, unless you think they've been manipulated. Do you?

Many informed voices, including Scotland's most senior law academic, the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission, the UN's observer at the trial and many British relatives of victims (who have followed the case more diligently than some of their US counterparts) believe Megrahi's guilt is highly questionable, or in some cases are convinced of his innocence. If they were proved right, it would put in question some of the behaviour of the Scottish prosecution service and the CIA. The "my country right or wrong" attitude that still seems to prevail in some US circles may partly explain the reluctance to dig deeper.

Paco Rabanne may like to know that one of Britain's most senior judges, Lord Denning, shared his mentality. Shortly before an appeal court overturned the convictions of the Birmingham Six (for crimes to which an IRA gang had long-since confessed) he regretted that the six had not been hanged, as that would have put paid to any campaign for their release. (He himself had disallowed an earlier appeal on the ground that it would have meant police officers had lied - a prospect he was not prepared to contemplate.)


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: SINSULL
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 09:34 PM

Victims' families in the USA also doubt his guilt or at least that he acted alone. The writer chose to include quotes only from those who rabidly opposed his freedom. I repeat the author had an axe to grind. This article does not present the facts but a biased version of the facts.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: heric
Date: 13 Aug 09 - 11:11 PM

That's fair on mudcat. On the health reform thread, we've just decided to support multi-trillion dollar, still unformed legislation (that's not even single payer) because some irrational and obnoxious woman in Lebanon, Pa opposes single payer.


Eric: That was an unusually talkative lawyer (if he's not a celebrity lawyer from Hollywood) you charmed. (I don't doubt a word you say - maybe not his, either.)


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: goatfell
Date: 14 Aug 09 - 03:58 AM

that is good news, now they might get the real murderers now, I don't support terrorism but I don't support vigelantes either, unless they have proof that he had done it then go ahead but why then where so meany americans 'tourists' told that night not fly on th that plane then.
the man is dying leave him with his family


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Eric the Viking
Date: 14 Aug 09 - 06:50 PM

Heric. Every word was true. We struck up this conversation on a jetty whilst fishing for mackeral. Only my son (aged 20) was there with us. We fished for about an hour on the top of the tide. It was the calmest and warmest of evenings and just one of those conversations. I felt he was feeling me out about the Ross case, of which I knew nothing except the divided local opinion. It was quite interesting and he was obviously well informed. This guy fished in a really posh suit !! I got the feeling he was high enough up to be in the Cherrie Blair league.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: DougR
Date: 14 Aug 09 - 07:52 PM

I agree with Sinsull and Spaw. All I have read here are opinions. The decision whether or not to release him should be made on facts, not popular opinion. The fact that he has testicular cancer should have nothing to do with it. Otherwise, any inmate on death row or in the general population of a prison could plead for mercy and expect release for no reason other than he had a life-taking disease.

DougR


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 14 Aug 09 - 07:53 PM

I see they've managed to use this as a way of stopping the appeal process, thus avoiding the political embarassment of having the verdict overthrown...


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: goatfell
Date: 14 Aug 09 - 08:44 PM

well have a word with the CIA or the FBI


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: DougR
Date: 15 Aug 09 - 01:28 AM

Goatfell: Er, ah, isn't this really more of a MI5 problem?

DougR


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: goatfell
Date: 15 Aug 09 - 08:59 AM

now Scotland relises him, does that make us an enemy of America?


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Peter K (Fionn)
Date: 15 Aug 09 - 09:13 AM

No, er, ah, Doug. It's not. Even if the malfeasance was British rather than American, it would not come down to MI5 but MI6. (But then I suppose you still regard talk of a US recession as "horse-pucky.")

Here's a link from The (London) Times today, which gives the background to McGoH's point above: Claims of a Lockerbie cover-up

Two governments and many gullible victim relatives (mostly on the US side of the water) will now rest content that Megrahi's conviction sovled the crime. For those who believe the atrocity was in response to Americans killing a similar number of Iranians a few months earlier (as the US admin itself maintained for a long time afterwards) many questions remain unanswered. Likewise for those who believe Megrahi could not have done the job on his own (as Megrahi's prosecutors also believed).

Someone contributing a comment in the attached link recalled George Bush Snr's thoughtful response to the shooting down of that Iranian civilian aircraft, Flight 655: "I'll never apologise for the United States of America, ever. I don't care what the facts are." And that was before 9/11 gave US admins some excuse for their barbarities.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: DougR
Date: 15 Aug 09 - 04:05 PM

Peter K: not that it has anything to do with the Lockerbie situation, Peter, but when did I describe the US recession as "horse pucky?"

I noted in today's Wall Street Journal that Megrahi has withdrawn his appeal. How will this affect the situation (the title of the thread, not the US recession)?

DougR


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Peace
Date: 15 Aug 09 - 07:09 PM

Isn't MI6 now called the SIS (Secret Intelligence Service)?


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Dave Hanson
Date: 16 Aug 09 - 03:41 AM

Shush, it's supposed to be a secret.

Dave H


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Peter K (Fionn)
Date: 16 Aug 09 - 05:37 AM

DougR, McGrath had already pointed out a few posts before yours that Megrahi had withdrawn his appeal. The last link I provided enlarged on that. It might have been better to follow the link before asking your question.

But since you asked, I don't think Megrahi's release will require a change of thread title. If it's the reference to his imminent freedom you're thinking about, that's still likely to happen. The sequence of events is 1) Megrahi is visited in jail by Scotland's justice minister, who has no obvious reason for taking such an exceptional step. 2) Megrahi withdraws his appeal, to the huge relief of the US admin (and because of that, to the supine UK government too). 3) Scotland's justice minister decides Megrahi should be released to die with his family.

The first two have already happened, the third is still likely, although withdrawal of the appeal has opened the way for another option: transfer to a Libyan jail to serve out the rest of his sentence nearer to his family (or to die from cancer if that comes sooner).

If you're worried about the fall-guy bit, the fact that his conviction will stand doesn't affect that. As I have pointed out already, even the prosecution case against him acknowledged that he was not the architect of the atrocity and could not have done the deed on his own. (Another guy was prosecuted alongside Megrahi, but that guy was found not guilty.)

You have tended to confirm, DougR, my impression that many Americans who have waded in on this matter really know very little about it. Which doesn't alter the fact that there are some very well informed American commentators too - but they don't seem to get much airtime, either side of the Atlantic.

(Thread drift to answer DougR's other question: The horse-pucky comment was made here in response to Steven Perlstein and Robert Samuelson writing this in the Washington Post in June 2007: "It is impossible to predict when the magic moment will be reached and everyone finally realizes that the prices being paid for these companies, and the debt taken on to support the acquisitions, are unsustainable. When that happens, it won't be pretty. Across the board, stock prices and company valuations will fall. Banks will announce painful write-offs, some hedge funds will close their doors, and private-equity funds will report disappointing returns. Some companies will be forced into bankruptcy or restructuring.")


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: akenaton
Date: 17 Aug 09 - 05:10 AM

Wow!....isn't politics a dirty business, almost as bad as banking and seemingly just as far above the law.

Who are the criminals in this case?


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: DougR
Date: 17 Aug 09 - 02:10 PM

Peter K: thank you for pointing out my deficiencies. I did not see McGrath's post before posing the question.

Thank you for posting the newspaper article. I can see where there is reason to suspect a cover-up.

(Continuing thread drift)I certainly was wrong back in 2007. Evidently that was the beginning of the current recession.

DougR


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Peter K (Fionn)
Date: 17 Aug 09 - 05:59 PM

Post appreciated DougR. I fear you're way ahead of me when it comes to basic decency.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Mrrzy
Date: 20 Aug 09 - 11:23 AM

Just saw this pic - he looks exactly like Bob Dylan, no?


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Peter K (Fionn)
Date: 20 Aug 09 - 12:57 PM

Whoever he looks like, he's on his way back to Libya as a free man, to die with his family.

Lockerbie bomber is freed

It's a decision that would not have been taken if there had been no devolution within the UK to a new Scottish legislature, because the UK government is much more vulnerable to US leverage than the Scottish government. (Or maybe the White House huffing and puffing is just window-dressing anyway, because there will be great relief in Washington that the case is not now likely to be re-opened.)

In the unlikely event that Megrahi is guilty as charged, justice has been tempered with mercy, and I'd rather see a civilised state doing that than simply indulging the lust for revenge. If,as seems more likely, he is innocent, then there has been no justice at all for anyone, and it is regrettable than he was coerced into withdrawing his appeal.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Penny S.
Date: 20 Aug 09 - 01:50 PM

I have only heard one American woman on the radio (BBC), on several occasions, very emotionally claiming that compassion was only to be given to those who were themselves compassionate, that she felt pity for her husband, another of her family, and herself, and that, as a Jew, she could not be expected to forgive Hitler. She gave the impression that justice was always a nasty and vicious thing and should never be tempered with mercy. She was only one voice, and I have heard no other Americans except quotes from Clinton and a few other officials. Not balanced.

Penny


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Peter K (Fionn)
Date: 20 Aug 09 - 02:22 PM

Penny, in what sense unbalanced? If you (or Sinsull, or anyone else) is aware of interested American parties (government officials, relatives of victims etc) who support the decision or are at least OK with it, please provide links. I am aware of several relatives in Britain who are in that category but none on the other side of the water. I'm not saying they don't exist. Sinsull thinks the BBC may be sheltering us from such voices, which could be true - though such imbalance by the BBC would surprise me.

If the woman you heard, Penny, was called Bernstein, I also heard her today and she is the fourth American relatve I have heard quoted who is completely hostile to Megrahi's release.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Jamming With Ollie Beak (inactive)
Date: 20 Aug 09 - 02:26 PM

and that's all it is with the USA...a lust for revenge, tempered with "oh won't this look good on my political résumé"

Sorry but that's the way I see it, rightly or wrongly.

Olivia Beak (Ms)


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: ard mhacha
Date: 20 Aug 09 - 02:43 PM

"Mr al-Megrahi did not show his victims any comfort or compassion. They were not allowed to return to the bosom of their families to see out their lives, let alone their dying days. No compassion was shown by him to them," he said.
"But that alone is not a reason for us to deny compassion to him and his family in his final days."
Mr MacAskill continued: "Our justice system demands that judgement be imposed, but compassion be available".
The above quote from Scottish Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill is an excellent reply to both the USA and the Islami fanatics.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: John on the Sunset Coast
Date: 20 Aug 09 - 02:55 PM

It would be wonderful if the United States could find a charge to bring against him which would circumvent double jeopardy, and eventually extradite him for trial in America. But, alas, I doubt the government has the cajones to to so.

I wonder how many terrorist things he can perpetrate in his 'last' years...and I really wonder how many last years he really has. Or if the severity of his disease is a ruse.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Rumncoke
Date: 20 Aug 09 - 03:40 PM

Medical opinion - as reported here, is that pancreatic cancer will kill the man in about three months. It is not an exact science - but it hardly matters.

I fail to see how putting a man on trial for a crime for which he has already been found guilty would achieve anything, though as Libya is hardly likely to hand over Mr al Megrahi to the questionable custody of the USA it is never going to happen anyway.

The man is ill and plainly it was put to him that if he withdrew his apppeal then he could be repatriated almost at once - it is fairly clear that the Libians have been expecting his return for several days. He must know that he has little time left - perhaps after ten years he can see no profit in continuing to appeal against the conviction, though he still protests against it.

I feel that releasing Mr al Megrahi was the right thing to do, in a Christian country, and that the Scottish justice secretary did try to explain this so that people who appear to have no comprehension of Judeo-Christian teachings could understand his decision.

Anne Croucher


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Jamming With Ollie Beak (inactive)
Date: 20 Aug 09 - 03:49 PM

"It would be wonderful if the United States could find a charge to bring against him which would circumvent double jeopardy, and eventually extradite him for trial in America"
- John on the Sunset Coast

it isn't going to happen, not in this, or any other, life time, so cease and desist with your thirst for revenge, because that's all it is, it has little or nothing to do with the lives of those who were killed, much the same as 911, using the memory of those who died to further your own need for blood, I sometimes wonder who's worse, the terrorists or.....

Olivia Beak (Ms)


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Q (Frank Staplin)
Date: 20 Aug 09 - 05:11 PM

Always been doubtful that he had anything to do with it.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: John on the Sunset Coast
Date: 20 Aug 09 - 05:54 PM

Sorry, Ollie, you could not be more wrong! It is not a matter of revenge...it is a matter of justice. Of course you might think that all punishment is a form of revenge, so then we have nothing to discuss. He is the convicted killer of 200+ people, including some Scots on the ground. Mr. Bomber was lucky to be sentenced as he was; it was too lenient then, it is a farce now. By contrast, Bernard Madoff got 200X that sentence that for a non-violent crime (not that he doesn't deserve much if not all that sentence).

I know that he will never stand trial in this country, he will never serve another day in prison for that heinous, cowardly action, but one can dream.

I note that many posters here think he is not the guilty party--just check the title of the thread. It seems to me that anything that does not conform to your world view you reflexively believe is not true. Just an observation on my part.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 20 Aug 09 - 06:05 PM

Letting Megrahi go home to die was the price that the Brutish gvernment was willing to pay to stop an appeal going ahead which would have revealed things that they didn't want to have revealed.

And in spite of all the public huff and puff, it seems pretty safe to assume that the American government felt the same way and gave the go-ahead behind the scenes.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Peter K (Fionn)
Date: 20 Aug 09 - 06:46 PM

John on the Sunset Coast, regarding the question of whether Megrahi is guilty, I would suggest you look into the case a little and you would then be better placed to reach an informed opinion. I will start you off with a short resume, but don't rely on it - more authoritative stuff is readily available.

1) A US warship shoots down an Iranian civilian airliner, killing 290 people (or murdering them, as the Iranian government put it at the time). I suppose it seemed like a good idea at the time, but it made Iran very cross for some reason, especially when footage went around the world showoing American crew members cheering their achievement.

2) Iran swore to knock out 10 American airliners in retaliation.

3) A few months later, the Lockerbie atrocity, which the US admin promptly blamed on Iran.

4) The US admin continued to blame Iran until the looming gulf war required the US to moderate its relations with Iran. At that time Libya was seeking to rehabilitate itself a little with the west.

5) Two suspects were identified, partly as a result of CIA intelligence, both of them in Libya and both readily offered up (or sacrificed) by Gaddafi.

6) The case against one suspect didn't stand up to scrutiny and was thrown out. The case against the other, Megrahi, was far more compelling. In essence it was that he had been identified by a Maltese shopkeeper as the guy who had bought items that finished up in the same suitcase as the bomb. That identification evidence has been in question since the start. Oneof the trial judges described the Maltese shopkeeper as "not the full shilling," and anyone who has any experience of misscarriages of justice knows it is unsafe to rely on identification evidence on its own.

The senior Scottish law prof who devised the formula of a Scottish court sitting in the Netherlands has serious doubts about Megrahi's guilt. So has the UN's observer at the trial. So has the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission, which does not lightly accept the possibility of misscarriages. And not least, several British relatives of victims believe Megrahi is innocent or at least that he could not have acted alone. And none of them, as far as I have heard, believe that Megrahi's conviction solved the case.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Folkiedave
Date: 20 Aug 09 - 06:55 PM

Spend ten minutes on reading up the case, and it is clear he didn't do it.

Try this version of the truth ..


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: John on the Sunset Coast
Date: 20 Aug 09 - 08:33 PM

I said he was the 'convicted killer'. Everything you point out is merely supposition, based on a scenario woven together in a way you choose to believe. It confirms my view of how you look at evidence.

He may not have acted alone...but that doesn't mean that he was not a party to the bombing. Just because he is the only one who was caught, doesn't mitigate what his sentence should be.

The U.S. my have blamed Iran...that could have been a rush to judgement in the initial horror of the bombing based on previous Iranian threats. But not all threats are followed through.

Sometimes witness i.d.s are good, sometime not so good. You choose to believe it isn't good in this case. Doesn't make it so though.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: ard mhacha
Date: 21 Aug 09 - 03:59 AM

Captain Rogers the Captain of The Vincennes the person responsible for shooting down the Irani plane was decorated on his return to the US.
The planes passengers were mainly women and children on a short flight shopping excursion, included in the 290 dead were 66 children.
Trigger-happy US ships Captains can be honoured as heroes after murdering 290 innocent people while the US tells the rest of the world how they should behave.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: open mike
Date: 21 Aug 09 - 10:34 PM

the fact that he was cheered as a hero when returning home is
not a good thing for international relations.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Penny S.
Date: 22 Aug 09 - 05:22 AM

Peter, my point about balance was that I had heard British voices in favour of release, plus one or two against, but the American voices were all against. I think when I posted I had conflated two women. Ms Bernstein did not base her argument on being Jewish. I think I heard someone called Cohen who did. After all the discussion here about Fox News finding the few Canadians against a national health service, I wondered if the BBC had somehow failed to find existing Americans who were not so vehement.

I'm glad that someone has mentioned that compassion is Judeo-Christian, not just Christian. I was thinking that, although churches have not always based teaching or behaviour on it, Jesus' forgiving of his tormentors did not demand compassion to be shown by them, nor repentance, before forgiveness was granted. And he was basing his teaching and behaviour on the teaching of the prophets, especially Hosea.

I have also been thinking about this. Written at a time when compassion did not often temper justice, or what was seen as justice at the time. Justice does seem to be a variable according to time and place.

The quality of mercy is not strained.
It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven
Upon the place beneath. It is twice blest:
It blesseth him that gives and him that takes.
Tis mightiest in the mightiest; it becomes
The throned monarch better than his crown.
His sceptre shows the force of temporal power,
The attribute to awe and majesty,
Wherein doth sit the dread and fear of kings.
But mercy is above this sceptred sway;
It is enthroned in the hearts of kings;
It is an attribute of God himself;

And earthly power doth then show like God's
When mercy seasons justice.

Penny


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: goatfell
Date: 22 Aug 09 - 06:27 AM

what happened to peace


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Peter K (Fionn)
Date: 22 Aug 09 - 06:47 AM

Thanks, Penny, for recalling those magnificent words of Portia's.

Open Mike, unlike the American whose ship blew an airliner out of the sky killing 290 innocent people, Megrahi was NOT given a hero's welcome. Most people in Libya (like many people around the world who are not dumb Americans and are not writing headlines for the brainless element of the British news media) believe Megrahi was wrongly convicted. Why wouldn't they want to celebrate his release?

Megrahi surely could have had a hero's welcome, simply by boasting, once he was free and safely back in Libya, that he had in fact done the deed. But far from that, he continued to protest his innocence as he has done from the outset. (The late Paul Foot, who wrote one of the articles linked above, and was greatly involved in exposing misscarriages of justice, came to the conclusion - albeit based on nothing more scientific than a wealth of empirical evidence - that most of those who continue protesting their innocence years after being "banged to rights" very probably ARE innocent.)

In contrast to some of the ranting US voices we have heard of late, I offer this from Megrahi himself:

Many people, including the relatives of those who died in, and over, Lockerbie, are, I know, upset that my appeal has come to an end; that nothing more can be done about the circumstances surrounding the Lockerbie bombing.

I share their frustration. I had most to gain and nothing to lose about the whole truth coming out - until my diagnosis of cancer.

To those victims' relatives who can bear to hear me say this: they continue to have my sincere sympathy for the unimaginable loss that they have suffered.

To those who bear me ill will, I do not return that to you.


Poor USA, put to shame by an evil Libyan! Here's his statement in full.)


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: jeddy
Date: 22 Aug 09 - 07:07 AM

i can't help but think that if HE is guilty, then what is to stop him carrying out some other atrocity?
i know what ending i would choose between quick and easy or slow and painful.

i can remember thinking at the time of his conviction that he was a scapegoat and although i am not scotish i am proud of their reasoning, taking the moral high ground and not wanting to come down to the level of, it doesn't matter if he is guilty or not we will keep him here.

although the celebrations of his return were indeed in poor taste, wouldn't we do the same if the boot was on the other foot? ... micheal shields? is that the guy who is accused of attempted murder of the barman?

didn't we all breathe a sigh of relief when he came home even though he is still in prison.

i am worried as to why he was allowed home as long as he dropped his appeal, this does smack of something fishy, but we will never really know.

take care all and remember, there is nothing so important as those we love so never take them for granted.

love
jade x x x x x


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Paul Burke
Date: 22 Aug 09 - 01:37 PM

There's a tendency to see celebrations in our own countries as spontaneous expressions of public opinion, and those in others as state organised. There's a bit of truth sometimes, but the truth is a bit more muddy especially if you think about the workings of our media. Tie a yellow ribbon?

The real tragedy of McGrathy (his name is written in Arabic, so there's no one to one transliteration- I'm sure his ancestors must be Irish) is that his release will put obstacles in the way of a deeper investigation into that tragis day. It's plain that the truth wasn't brought out by the trial; it really was a stitch up. McGrathy was a nasty piece of work, and a secret agent of a murderous state, but did he do THAT crime? And if he didn't who did? Did the Iranians order it in retalitation for the American shooting down of the airliner?


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: folk1e
Date: 22 Aug 09 - 02:06 PM

This all goes to show that we are living in an increasingly smaller world. Our actions reverberate louder and further than ever.

If one of the reasons for Megrahi's release is an increase in trade not a price worth paying, his guilt or innocence being irrelevant? If we become more enmeshed in world trade, conflict becomes more unlikely, and the world is a safer place!

For those who doubt that the guilty being released from punishment can be a good thing I suggest you look at the conflict resolution in Ireland and also South Africa! It may be a hard thing to do but the results may just be worth it!


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Q (Frank Staplin)
Date: 22 Aug 09 - 02:27 PM

Strange no one has mentioned the U. S. air strike on Mo'ammar Gadhafi's residence in Tripoli in which his adopted daughter was killed along with 41 Libyans.
And there is wonder that Libyans cheered his return?

Moreover he was convicted on very slight circumstantial evidence of an article of clothing he supposedly once owned being found aboard the downed plane.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Peter K (Fionn)
Date: 23 Aug 09 - 08:31 AM

Just heard a (former?) FBI agent in Florida interviewed on BBC radio news - appalled by the decision to release Megrahi, but measured, thoughtful and intelligent, in stark contrast with most other American voices I have heard on this issue. From memory his name was Bill Garvey or something like that.

BBC Radio 4 is repeating a play based on the trial, next Saturday, 29 August. Details here. Typically it will be available on the internet for seven days following broadcast, but I am never sure whether that facility is available beyond the UK.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Q (Frank Staplin)
Date: 23 Aug 09 - 01:35 PM

Thanks, Peter K.
BBC Radio 4 is broadcast on the net, I am listening to it now. (The next program up, the "Archers," will not find me listening; it is a bit beyond American-Canadian comprehension.

The announcement of the trial broadcast mentions the doubts about Megrahi's conviction, and the possible miscarriage of justice.

Scottish judicial system- A verdict not possible in American courts is "not proven." Also not possible is "compassionate release."


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: robomatic
Date: 23 Aug 09 - 01:45 PM

I find the discussion here more interesting than the events in Scotland and Libya which have inspired them. There is a much higher level of cynicism on the East side of the pond. The readiness to believe in a fall guy meshes surrealistically with the ready internment of the convicted man in the first place.

As to the 'charming' recitation of Portia from Merchant of Venice, the words were put in the mouth of a gentile as part of a set-up to turn the tables on Shylock over a ludicrous rider on a loan agreement and so ruin him. I prefer his honest and expressive soliloquy to Portia's bland blather:

"Hath not a Jew eyes? hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions? fed with the same food, hurt with the same weapons, subject to the same diseases, healed by the same means, warmed and cooled by the same winter and summer, as a Christian is? If you prick us, do we not bleed? if you tickle us, do we not laugh? if you poison us, do we not die? and if you wrong us, shall we not revenge? If we are like you in the rest, we will resemble you in that. If a Jew wrong a Christian, what is his humility? Revenge! If a Christian wrong a Jew, what should his sufferance be by Christian example? Why, revenge! The villainy you teach me I will execute, and it shall go hard but I will better the instruction."

In this case, I would find it reasonable to substitute 'bombing victim' for 'Jew'. I'm not aware that anyone on Pan Am Flight 103 had done anything to incite revenge.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Penny S.
Date: 23 Aug 09 - 03:16 PM

Don't forget that Shakespeare's plays were not divorced from the society they were written in. Look outside the theatre to see how Portia's words might have sounded to those in power. To talk of the mighty, is not to talk of Shylock's position at the time in the trial scene, is it? It sticks out like a sore thumb in its content being so different from its intent. And it doesn't make the content wrong.

Penny


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Penny S.
Date: 23 Aug 09 - 03:17 PM

And you have not addressed the words of Christ, in the same vein.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Penny S.
Date: 23 Aug 09 - 03:26 PM

Deuteronomy 32:35 'Vengeance is Mine, and retribution, In due time their foot will slip; For the day of their calamity is near, And the impending things are hastening upon them.'

Proverbs 20:22 Do not say, "I will repay evil"; Wait for the LORD, and He will save you.

Proverbs 24:29 Do not say, "Thus I shall do to him as he has done to me; I will render to the man according to his work."

Romans 12:19 Dearly beloved, avenge not yourselves, but rather give place unto wrath: for it is written, Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord. (And Paul was trained in Pharisaical study of Torah.)

Penny


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 23 Aug 09 - 04:44 PM

"There is a much higher level of cynicism on the East side of the pond."

So how come the conspiracy theories concerning what actually happened on 9/11?


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: robomatic
Date: 23 Aug 09 - 04:54 PM

Penny:

You make a good point, but it's not countering the point I'm making. My first statement was regarding the European contingent by-and-large going with a supposition that the freed man was a fall-guy, notwithstanding his ten years internment for the crime. It reeks of turn-around. "We've got the guy in jail. We're letting him out? Oh, well he was a fall-guy anyway!" There should either be outrage over false imprisonment, or outrage over the release of the perpetrater of a horrendous crime. Instead there's a kind of pall of 'what does one expect'. That's the difference I perceive between the Eastern side and the Wester side.

You didn't start out quoting the Bible. You quoted Shakespeare minus the context. I added more Shakespeare PLUS context.

I don't find that the NT corrects or eliminates the OT and one can find references to vengeance within, although it is quite true that on more than one occasion, we are told that "vengeance is MINE" saith the Lord, indicating 'MINE and not YOURS' and this is wisdom.

On the other hand, there is more than vengeance at stake here. The Good Book also tells us that "blood cries out".

I also think if we go back to the idea that the man was convicted and is guilty, releasing him enables him to harm again, to give aid and comfort to our collective enemies, to give aid comfort and INFORMATION to others who would harm us. So if there is vengeance involved, it is not the thing entirely.

Returning to Portia's mercy solo, I find it hypocritical, considering what is about to happen to Shylock. This is no fault with Shakespeare, it is exactly what Shakespeare is master of, sweet words and foul deeds.

The play is about vengeance, racism, and Jew-baiting. Fun for the whole family, and popular among the entire range of watchers. I saw it in London with Lawrence Olivier playing the title role. At the end a violin played "Kaddish". For Shylock the abandonment of his religion was death.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Penny S.
Date: 23 Aug 09 - 05:22 PM

robomatic, do look back at my original post. I did not quote the bible, but I did refer to Christ's words on the cross, and his Jewish context.

Penny


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Peter K (Fionn)
Date: 23 Aug 09 - 05:30 PM

robomatic, the guy who decided to release Megrahi did not do so because he thought Megrahi might be innocent. In fact he stated explicitly that he accepted the court verdict. Maybe that's what he believes, or maybe he just thought that questioning the verdict (and thereby impuning the US intelligence agencies) was a step too far even for the independently minded Scottish Nationalist Party.

The more intelligent relatives of victims, seemingly all British (sheer coincidence I'm sure), do regard the evidence against Megrahi as wafer thin, as you are bound to do yourself robomatic, simply because it is. But that's a separate issue. Megrahi's release was purely an act of compassion - an option that is available in Scotland as Q pointed out (also available in England and Wales), but apparently not in the US.

And by the way, doubts about the conviction do not rest on one of those bizarre conspiracy theories to which gullible Americans seem to be addicted. Megrahi's appeal, now aborted, was recommended by Scotland's Criminal Cases Review Commission after an intensive four-year re-examination of the case. Like its England-Wales counterpart, that commission does not lightly question court verdicts, as any UK lawyer would tell you.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Penny S.
Date: 23 Aug 09 - 05:33 PM

And I don't deny the nastiness, and the difficulties of performance of "Merchant" (as of "Shrew"), but like Richard II being performed at the time of Essex's rebellion, Shakespeare's plays are not without context in their time. Someone who is a controlled daughter of a dead father does a dramatic, stick in your mind, speech about those in power using mercy - that's an interesting image for the time, and a time used to reading symbols. There's quite a bit about daughters and fathers in all that nastiness.

I guess there are people who would rather live in a society where justice is equated with retribution, and others who would rather justice is tempered with mercy, and both will find justification in whatever scripture they follow.

By a curious link, a friend's father died in agony of prostate cancer in the same ward treating Ronnie Biggs. Palliative care, as I also saw with my mother, is not necessarily very effective. It's a small mercy to let the man see his family.


Penny


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Q (Frank Staplin)
Date: 23 Aug 09 - 06:14 PM

Anyone interested in the Lockerbie trial should read this summary: "The Lockerbie Trial Verdict," Michael P. Sharf, printed in ASIL (American Society of International Law).

The verdict was a near thing; connections were unclear and key witnesses had lied.

Trial


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: ard mhacha
Date: 24 Aug 09 - 10:21 AM

I remember reading of a song written in honour of mass murderer and war criminal Lieutenant William Calley in which there was over half a million orders for a single by country singer Tony Nelson. Calley after serving a short time in jail for being in charge of a US Company found guilty of wiping out the Vietnamese village of My Lai resulting in the deaths of over 500, was pardoned by US President Nixon.
Helicopter pilot Hugh Thompson who observed from the air what was taking place landed his helicopter and saved 16 of the villagers.
Thompson`s reward for this humanitarian act was to be smeared as a liar by Chairman F Edward Hebert at a House Armed Services meeting.

This is not a million miles away from the rumpus over Meghrahi`s release, that a US President can release a mass murderer and the good people of the US hardly raised a whimper.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: GUEST,Mr Red
Date: 25 Aug 09 - 09:20 AM

If the guy was innocent then a lot of people spent a lot of money trying to put a name on the perpertraitor. Don't forget the other accused was found not guilty. Cynics would cite lack of evidence.

In Scottish law the "not proven" verdict is still possible. It was not used by name.

Releasing him was an act of compassion, which the Lybian leader didn't seem to regard as needing any reciprocal understanding of etiquette. Just like the time he chose to sit beside Tony Blair and appear to western eyes as the picture of dimplomacy, only to have the soles of his shoes facing Tony Blair. The equivalent of the western insult of turning and presenting ones back.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: robomatic
Date: 25 Aug 09 - 10:42 PM

In the time since my last post I read the book "Siege of Mecca" wherein a hundred or more armed Sunni Jihadis siezed the shrine at Mecca in 1979 and proclaimed one among them the 'Mahdi'. They were rooted out after two weeks of battle with various armed forces. The Saudis finally evicted them with poison gas, and took over 68 prisoners. They were distributed among the cities of Saudi Arabia and beheaded via swords.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Mrrzy
Date: 26 Aug 09 - 01:04 PM

Two points: 1) Scotland has a Not Proven verdict. If they weren't sure, they didn't have to acquit, so I think they were sure.
2) Scotland certainly has the high moral ground here - other people's bad behavior is no excuse for your own. I am reminded of a song... something about you take the high ground?

Also, I don't hear a lot of outrage from other people who, like me, have lost close family to terrorists. It's mostly the less-affected who are so up in arms, it seems to me.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: GUEST,Philippa
Date: 26 Aug 09 - 01:49 PM

link to Eamonn McCann's article in this Tuesday's Derry Journal (though PeterK/Fionn has given much of same info in 20/22 Aug messages). The two items were published together:
alMegrahi1
alMegrahi2

I watched BBC newsnight discussion the night after release. Someone else will have to tell you the name and former position of the American who very offensively said something like "people are going to be very angry if he's still alive three months from now"
Compassionate release can only be granted if the prisoner is given a medical prognosis of three months life expectancy, but we all know that medical prediction is inexact and that the emotion lift of being home might improve life expectancy. I don't imagine this man has seen much of his family during the years of imprisonment and if he had to wait much longer he may not have been fit for the journey.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Keith A of Hertford
Date: 27 Aug 09 - 05:06 AM

There is new evidence, and also evidence that was witheld.
E.g. that the shopkeeper who id'd him had already seen photos of him, and received a large reward.
E.g. a break in at Heathrow airport.

Had a scond appeal been heard it is highly probable that his conviction would be declared unsafe, leading to release and compensation.
Uk and Scots govts. hugely relieved to have avoided that scenario.
Very convenient.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Peter K (Fionn)
Date: 27 Aug 09 - 06:25 PM

But not as convenient as for the US government Keith. It may be justice US-style to "reward" key witnesses with millions for their dubious evidence, but to the rest of the civilised world such behaviour stinks. (Thirty pieces of silver)

No wonder Scotland's pre-eminent law academic, Prof Robert Black, who devised the trial formula of a Scottish court sitting in the Netherlands, regarded the case against Megrahi as not only entirely circumstantial but also "very weak" - as well as being "further undermined" by the prosecution's admission that it could not establish how the bomb got on to flight 103. (Robert Black's commentary on the trial.)

Philippa: the guy on Newsnight was the former US Ambassador to the UN John Bolton (who else? LOL). That discussion – illustrative of the gulf in values east and west of the pond – can be viewed HERE - but I don't know for how long. Incidentally, Bolton quoted a poll showing 82 per cent of ALL Americans were hostile to Megrahi's release. So much for Sinsull's accusation of BBC bias, which sounded gratuitous even without that poll evidence.

Thanks Philippa for linking the Eamonn McCann article. A first-class piece of work, as always from him. It's a pity that some of those who have shot from the hip in this thread will not bother to read it.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 30 Aug 09 - 07:47 AM

Very interesting discussion this morning on BBC1's 'The Big Questions' about the meaning of 'compassion' and 'forgiveness', and their place in situations like this.

The parents of two young people who had been murdered gave their diametrically opposed views on forgiveness/compassion. THe couple who forgave came across as still very sad, but calm and 'at peace'. The father who refused to forgive appeared to be consumed by rage and personal feelings of guilt over what happened to his daughter.

A lesson there, IMHO. Compassion and forgiveness do not remove the responsibility for the crime from the perpetrator, he/she will always have that to live with. But, much more importantly, it does give those who grieve a means of moving on and coping with their loss.

I know which place I'd rather be in.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: robomatic
Date: 30 Aug 09 - 02:56 PM

I think there's a place for compassion and forgiveness, and there's a place for vengeance. The two are not mutually exclusive.

As I've already said, there's a place for perception of continuing danger presented by letting someone give aid, comfort, and information to those who wish to do us harm.

The self-satisfaction of those who are convinced that compassion was a creditable, legitimate, and appropriate action in this case balances poorly with their lack of compassion for victims of the crime who are very vocal in their non-acceptance of this action and the cavalier manner in which it has been determined and prosecuted. They are making judgements on the feelings of others, which are real nevertheless.

What if I were to balance the 'good' feeling on the part of the convicted felon and his Libyan compatriots versus the 'bad' feelings of the families of the murdered? Has more 'good' than 'harm' come out of this?


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Rumncoke
Date: 30 Aug 09 - 04:11 PM

News reports tonight showed Mr al Megrahi in hospital - I doubt he is going to last much longer.

Anne Croucher


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T
Date: 30 Aug 09 - 05:07 PM

I've watched this thread develop, without comment, because I have had a great deal of difficulty in deciding what my REAL feelings are about this case.

Since he HAS been convicted (on however weak a case), I am ignoring the question of possible innocence, and dealing with my reaction on the assumption that the verdict was correct.

I am also ignoring the (possibly underhand) reasons why the Scottish authorities released him, and dealing with MY opinion as to whether it was right for them to do so.

My initial knee jerk reaction was that he should rot in jail, and die there, for his cold, premeditated, murder of 270 people who were not, by any stretch of the imagination, legitimate targets even if the attack had been carried out during a declared war.

I thought about that quite a lot, and realised that I couldn't be sure that my conclusion was based on a logical assessment, rather than a need for vengeance. I COULD, of course RATIONALISE it as the result of reasoned analysis, but that's not how I work.....well, not consciously at least!

So the next train of thought was fairly obvious. What is the basis for exercising compassion?

The immediate, and superficial, response is of course "Do I want to show humanity, mercy and compassion to one who has himself shown none to his victims, or would I rather sink to his level, and be just as cold hearted and merciless as he was?"

At this point, I was feeling very glad that the decision to release was NOT mine to make.

The clincher was the one single point which nobody has recognised or addressed. There were innocent victims ON BOTH SIDES of this story.

Megrahi is irrelevant. Whether he dies in jail, or in his bed, HE WILL DIE very soon.

But Megrahi has a family. They committed no crime. They killed nobody. They are INNOCENT.

It was right to send him home, not for his sake, but for the sake of that innocent group of people who still love him, in spite of his actions.

All the rest of the argument is irrelevant.

IN MY OPINION!
Don T.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Crow Sister (off with the fairies)
Date: 30 Aug 09 - 05:15 PM

Innocent or Guilty, the guy is dying and quickly, and represents no danger to any human being.

The fact that he is dying means, he is in no position to press ahead with any further legal challenge to a conviction, which might very well be overturned if he were well enough to do so.

The truth of the matter may never now be known. The least we can do is send a potentially innocent man, who will neither be in any position to do any other any person harm - nor equally be free to prove his innocence, home to die.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: robomatic
Date: 30 Aug 09 - 05:49 PM

Don: What if the convicted man's family shares his values and believe he's a jihadi who will go to a post-death reward for his actions. From that point of view it's win-win.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Crow Sister (off with the fairies)
Date: 30 Aug 09 - 06:13 PM

"What if the convicted man's family shares his values"

We don't (officially) convict the family, of an individuals crime. If we did, we'd be convicting all family members of whatever crime their relations commit. Be a bummer for lots of people (including the nice family members of all kinds of wealthy and well connected people) if they were to be tarred with the same brush as those who have done terrible things. Of course, so many well connected people, get away with it in the first place, so maybe that wouldn't be such a big problem.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: robomatic
Date: 30 Aug 09 - 07:18 PM

Crow Sister writted:
"We don't (officially) convict the family, of an individuals crime. If we did, we'd be convicting all family members of whatever crime their relations commit. Be a bummer for lots of people (including the nice family members of all kinds of wealthy and well connected people) if they were to be tarred with the same brush as those who have done terrible things. Of course, so many well connected people, get away with it in the first place, so maybe that wouldn't be such a big problem."

That was an illogical ramble that seemed to give up any pretense of searching for a moral structure, it feels good so do it.

I was addressing Don's attempt to break down his thoughts on the events of the pardon. I went through something similar (before coming to a different conclusion) only I don't have the eloquence in expressing myself that Don has. Nevertheless I addressed a point he raised- He maintained that there was compassion to be felt for the convicted man's 'innocent' family members. I raised the question that maybe they aren't so innocent. If you pay attention to the nature of jihad and both homicidal and suicidal bombers you would know there is an entire organized culture of glorification of same. It is an institution with its own economy and its own media nets.

This had nothing to do with the conviction, it had everything to do with the vaunted notion of 'compassion' which I am maintaining has been perverted out of all recognition of the actual meaning. Your little note is evidence of just that.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Peter K (Fionn)
Date: 30 Aug 09 - 10:39 PM

You're right you don't have the eloquence, robomatic, so it's perhaps not so smart to accuse someone else of rambling.

I have to say I'm amazed to see anyone advocating, or at least defending, vengeance. For me it is one of the most alarming and sickening failings of the human condition. No doubt we have all thirsted for it in a red-mist moment, on account of some crime against us, great or small. But surely the laws of justice in any civilised state should rise above such base instincts. And to underscore Backwoodsman's point, those who lust for revenge often finish up destroying their own lives.

Getting back to Megrahi, I agree with Anne Croucher that he surely can't last much longer. Which will at least prove that God is on John Bolton's side. (I put a link to his obscene comment on the matter in my previous post.) Megrahi, incidentally, says he is going to give all his defence papers to Jim Swire who will use them to continue pressing for a public enquiry into Lockerbie.

If I had committed a crime myself, and was protesting my innocence, I'm not sure that I would be as agitated as Megrahi seems to be about having the case crawled over again in every detail. This brings me to one of robomatic's most idiotic arguments: his concern that Megrahi's family may share his jihadist mentality. It's idiotic because (sorry, but I have to spell this out for robomatic)... It's idiotic because Megrahi continues vehemently to deny involvement in the atrocity. Clearly he intends to die protesting his innocence rather than claiming jihadist status. That's rather unusual for a jihadist.

The BBC's radio reconstruction of the trial can now be heard on their website until Sataurday. Again I put a link in my previous post. No-one hearing it could be sanguine about the verdict, but for me it highlighted a point I'd forgotten and which no-one else has mentioned: Megrahi's guilt was decided not by a jury but by three judges, who would certainly have been more aware than a jury of realpolitik pressures.

On that question of realpolitik. the (London) Sunday Times published correspondence today which showed a senior UK government minister seeking to appease Libya, at the time of a major oil deal, by ensuring that Megrahi was not excluded from the terms of a prisoner transfer agreement between the two ocuntries. That stinks, but it's no worse than we would expect from a government that sold Saudi Arabia an airforce. It doesn't alter the fact, now widely acknowledged by constitutionalists, that the matter was outside the UK government's gift. And it doesn't alter the fact that the decision in Scotland (which Don chose casually and uncharacteristically to smear) was on compassionate grounds.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 31 Aug 09 - 03:54 AM

Just got back to this one - nicely put Peter.

Robo - you seem to have fallen into the usual mistake made by vengeance-freaks, in making the assumption that forgiveness trumps justice, and somehow removes responsibility from the perpetrator.

Completely wrong!

Forgiveness is not perpetrator-focussed, it confers nothing on the perpetrator (except possibly, and perversely in the case of a 'jihadist' as you call al-Megrahi, the knowledge that his crime failed to make its intended mark). Justice still prevails, forgiveness does not seek to remove responsibility from the perpetrator, nor to replace due process of law, indeed it relies on that process to support the forgiving and healing process - "do the crime, do the time" - it still prevails.

Forgiveness is victim-focussed, it provides a means for the release of the victim from the constant destructive cycle of rage and lust for vengeance which boils up in him/her over and over and over again - for ever, unless they come to the realisation that there is a route out of their misery.

Forgiveness isn't a betrayal, it's an awakening. It doesn't seek to deny the crime, it faces and accepts it. It doesn't remove the responsibility from the perpetrator, it doesn't release him from prison - he stays there and faces due process - but it does release the victims from their own prison of rage and vengefulness, and gives them a means to live at peace. Most importantly, it doesn't seek to minimise the enormity of the crime, nor wipe out the memory of those who died, nor blot out the pain of loss - but it allows those who still live to go on through their lives without the burden of rage, self-guilt and vengefulness which, on top of everything else they have suffered, often makes life intolerable.

I don't know whether al-Megrahi is innocent or as guilty as sin, and I'm not sure whether I support his release or not - it was within the law of Scotland and therefore it's their right to do it. But I do know that I care far more for the victims than I do for the perpetrator(s), whoever the perpetrator(s) may be, and I'd bet my lifetime-earnings plus my pension that those victims who forgave are having a much better life than those who are still filled with rage, bay like hounds for blood, and refuse forgiveness.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T
Date: 31 Aug 09 - 10:09 AM

""Don: What if the convicted man's family shares his values and believe he's a jihadi who will go to a post-death reward for his actions. From that point of view it's win-win.""

Robo, you can fabricate all the hypothetical possibilities you choose, but there is no evidence to suggest that any member of his family shared or even knew about his terrorist activities, and it is unlikely that he will shortly meet with aliens who can cure his cancer.

So while conspiracy theorists look around for another, more viable, target, why not let the family have the chance to say goodbye. It looks as though the nay sayers won't have long to wait for their little payback. Much good may it do them!

I feel much better for knowing that I managed to avoid becoming a part of the lynch mob, who are smarting from losing the last ounce from their pound of flesh.

Don T.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T
Date: 31 Aug 09 - 10:21 AM

""And it doesn't alter the fact that the decision in Scotland (which Don chose casually and uncharacteristically to smear) was on compassionate grounds.""

I did not attempt, casually or otherwise, to smear the Scottish Government, or its position on releasing Megrahi.

The suspicion of an economic motive for this action was not MY invention, but an oft expressed opinion of a number of objectors.

I mentioned it only to make the point that I had SPECIFICALLY excluded it from my deliberations, in exactly the same way that I excluded his possible innocence, the latter not having alerted your radar to a possible slur against the Scottish judicial process.

Please refrain from interpreting my motives, until you can prove your abilities as a mind reader. Thus far you are well off base.

Don T.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Peter K (Fionn)
Date: 31 Aug 09 - 02:47 PM

The bit that I had in mind, Don, was your gratuitous aside in brackets:

I am also ignoring the (possibly underhand) reasons why the Scottish authorities released him...


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Stringsinger
Date: 31 Aug 09 - 05:16 PM

The jury is still out on this decision.

How Libya Was Framed
for the Lockerbie
Bombing
By Alexander Cockburn
T
here were howls of fury when
the Scottish justice minister re-
leased from his Scottish prison
Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi, the Libyan
Arab Airlines official convicted of
planting the bomb on board Pan Am
Flight 103 that killed 281 people on the
plane and in the village of Lockerbie on
December 21, 1988. Megrahi's colleague,
Lamen Khalifa Fhimah, was acquitted
of charges in the terrorist attack. Across
Limbaugh-land vitriol was sprayed in the
general direction of both Scotland and
Libya. FBI Director Robert Mueller, who
in 1991 was assistant attorney general in
charge of the investigation of al-Megrahi,
wrote that he was "outraged at the deci-
sion, blithely defended on the grounds of
'compassion.'" (Megrahi is suffering from
terminal prostate cancer.)The Scottish
government hit back, saying that while
"compassionate release" might not be
part of the U.S. justice system, it was a
proper part of Scotland's.
Actually, the "compassionate" release
may have been prompted by rather more
mercenary or self-interested calculations.
There have been allegations in the U.K.
of Megrahi's release being part of a larger
British deal with Libya involving trade
agreements and arms sales. It is certain
that the release aborted Megrahi's appeal,
which would have thrown a lurid and un-
flattering light on the kangaroo trial in
2000. This was a particularly dark day for
the reputation of Scottish justice since it
showed clearly that the Scottish bench
clicked its heels to commands from
Westminster that no matter how thread-
bare the case against Megrahi was, he
had to be convicted. But now the thou-
sands of pages of Mehrahi's appeal go
into the trash bin and Megrahi will, in the
complacent words of a Scottish govern-
ment spokesman, "die a convicted man."
There's a famous passage in Memorials
of His Time, my great-great grandfa-
ther, Lord Cockburn's memoirs, where
the renowned Scotch judge and leading
Whig stigmatizes some of his Tory pre-
decessors on the bench, including the
terrible Lord Braxfield, who presided
over what Cockburn called "the indel-
ible iniquity" of the sedition trials of
1793 and 1794. "Let them bring me pris-
oners, and I'll find them law," Cockburn
quotes Braxfield as saying privately, also
whispering from the bench to a juror he
knew, "Come awa, Maister Horner, come
awa, and help us to hang ane o' thae da-
amned scoondrels."
Braxfield most certainly has his politi-
cal disciples on the Scottish bench in the
Lockerbie trial in 2000, in the persons
of the three judges who traveled to the
Netherlands to preside over the trial of
the two Libyans charged with planting
the device that prompted the crash of
Pan Am Flight 103. In a trenchant early
criticism of the verdict, Hans Koechler, a
distinguished Austrian philosopher ap-
pointed as one of five international ob-
servers at the trial in Zeist, Holland, by
U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, is-
sued a well-merited denunciation of the
judges' bizarre conclusion. "In my opin-
ion," Koechler said, "there seemed to be
considerable political influence on the
judges and the verdict."
Koechler pointed out that the judges
found Megrahi guilty even though they
themselves admitted that his identifi-
cation by a Maltese shop owner (sum-
moned by the prosecution to testify that
Megrahi bought clothes, later deemed to
have been packed in the lethal suitcase
bomb) was "not absolute" and that there
was a "mass of conflicting evidence."
Furthermore, Koechler queried the
active involvement of senior U.S. Justice
Department officials as part of the Scotch a similar vein, the Harvard researcher
Byron Good writes, "Where such ill-
ness is considered inevitably chronic,
an essential part of the self that cannot
be altered … the illness is more likely to
be chronic." By contrast, as a prodigious
amount of ethnographic literature has
shown, mental illness is far less func-
tionally debilitating in societies where it
is understood as ephemeral rather than
congenital, and invested with philosophi-
cal meaning through rich cultural idioms
like spirit possession and trance.
Such findings throw into serious doubt
the Hippocratic alibis of the drug barons
and their proxies. It is not my intent to
either romanticize the world's have-nots
or impugn the philanthropic impulse of
doctors who, forced to make therapeu-
tic decisions in severely constrained cir-
cumstances, may have no choice but to
salve their patients' psychic wounds with
chemical prostheses and make diagno-
ses that they themselves find suspect. It
is, however, incumbent upon us to ask
whose interests are served when unruly
citizenries are chemically pacified, par-
ticularly in a global polity marked by
such ruthless asymmetries of wealth and
health. Like any other industry, the psy-
chopharmaceutical sector is profit-based
and cannot be expected to promote
views of illness that are unfavorable to
their economic interests; indeed, they are
obliged to actively discredit such views.
Meeting Wall Street growth expectations
has become an increasingly daunting task
as pharmaceuticals companies' patents
on their blockbuster molecules sequen-
tially expire, opening the international
market to a flood of generics. In order
to keep pace with investors' hopes, the
multinationals must usher three to five
new compounds into domestic markets
per year, or, as we have seen, compensate
for fiscal shortfalls by growing markets
abroad. If an unintended outcome of
this strategy is the excision of historical
depth and geographic breadth from local
understandings of oppression, that is just
a happy coincidence for ruling elites. CP
in the suitcase that contained the bomb,
had been bought by the accused Megrahi
from a shop in Malta; and (c) that a "se-
cret witness," Abdulmajid Gialka, a for-
mer colleague of the accused pair in the
Libyan Airlines office in Malta, would
testify that he had observed them either
constructing the bomb or at least seen
them loading on the plane in Frankfurt.
The prosecution was unable to pro-
duce evidence to substantiate any of
these points or to encourage any confi-
dence in Gialka's reliability as a witness.
The Swiss manufacturer of the timer,
Edwin Bollier, testified he had sold timers
of a similar type to the East Germans and
conceded, under cross-examination by
defense lawyers, that he had connections
to many intelligence agencies, including
not only the Libyans but also the CIA.
By the time of the trial, Gialka had
been living under witness protection
in the U.S.A. He had received $320,000
from his American hosts and, in the
event of conviction of the accused, stood
to collect up to $4 million in reward
money. He had CIA connections, so the
defense lawyers learned, before 1988.
The prosecution's case absolutely de-
pended on proving beyond a reasonable
doubt that Megrahi was the man who
bought the clothes, traced by police to a
Maltese clothes shop. In nineteen sepa-
rate statements to police prior to the
trial the shopkeeper, Tony Gauci, had
failed to make a positive identification of
Megrahi. In the witness box, Gauci was
asked five times if he recognized anyone
in the courtroom. No answer. Finally, the
exasperated prosecutor pointed to the
dock and asked if the man sitting on the
left was the customer in question. Even
so, the best that Gauci could do was to
mumble that "he resembles him."
Gauci had also told the police that the
man who bought the clothes was 6 feet
tall and over 50 years of age. Megrahi is
5 feet 8 inches tall, and in late 1988 he
was 36. The clothes were bought either
on November 23 or December 7, 1988.

More at CounterPunch
September 1-15, 2009    Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair vol. 16, no. 15


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T
Date: 31 Aug 09 - 05:23 PM

""The bit that I had in mind, Don, was your gratuitous aside in brackets:

I am also ignoring the (possibly underhand) reasons why the Scottish authorities released him...
""


You really don't pay attention do you.

That comment had been made further up this thread (NOT BY ME!), and in several media comments. I reproduced it to point up the FACT that it was playing no part in my decisions as to my response.

Why do you find that so difficult to grasp? Or are you just trying to detract from my rationale generally? If so, WHY?

Don T.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Peter K (Fionn)
Date: 31 Aug 09 - 08:20 PM

Well I looked at your post again Don, and it still reads to me as though that qualification in brackets was yours. But I do accept, belatedly, that it wasn't so my aplogies for misunderstanding. And for the record, I'm completely on board with your general rationale.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: robomatic
Date: 31 Aug 09 - 10:20 PM

I think my points have been sideswiped under a blanket assertion that it should be "vengeance first".

1) When in fact there were judicial proceedings and findings.
2) When the insistence of compassion toward the convicted seems to trump compassion toward the relatives of the victims (victims themselves), and their feelings are linked to vengeance and therefore denigraed.
3) The courts are instituted as a solution to the vengeance issue. When the courts don't do their job, or are perceived not to be doing their job, the vengeance issue comes right back.
4) A valid point was made that jihadis would be out front at being publicized as such, but this is not necessarily the case. State sponsored terrorism might be conducted with a desire to be deniable.

In brief, there are basic assumptions rampant through this thread, that vengeance is de facto wrong, that the convicted person was wrongfully convicted, that the hurt feelings of the relatives of the victim are less important than the feelings of the relatives of the convicted.

On the other hand, this thread has been worthwhile to me, most of those disagreeing with me have made me think, which is no small achievement.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T
Date: 01 Sep 09 - 07:52 PM

Peter, that is generous of you, and much appreciated. Perhaps I wasn't quite as clear as I intended to be, but I am glad that we are, in principle, agreeing as to the outcome.

Don T.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T
Date: 01 Sep 09 - 08:03 PM

""that the hurt feelings of the relatives of the victim are less important than the feelings of the relatives of the convicted.""

No Robo! Never LESS important, but perhaps the feelings of Megrahi's family are still of SOME importance, when their family member has such a short time left, and would it not be better for the souls of those who suffered, if they showed the mercy that their loved ones did not receive.

Is it ever a good thing to set oneself down to the level of him who has no moral compass, and if one does so, just what IS the difference between US and THEM?

That, for me, is the argument against the desire for vengeance.

Don T.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Peter K (Fionn)
Date: 01 Sep 09 - 08:59 PM

Or see what you think about this, robomatic....

If my daughter was ever on the receiving end of criminal violence, I would want the perpetrators to be dealt with rationally, in the cold light of day, and NOT according to whatever crazy, churned up emotions I would be feeling after such an event. I know that if I were ever in that state I would be unfit to take an objective view. For the same reason I am relieved that the Lockerbie victim-relatives are not making the decisions about Megrahi, whether his conviction is sound or not. But that should not be read as meaning I am dismissive of their losses.

It's easy enough to say this stuff,of course, and no doubt I might regret having said it if I were ever put to a Lockerbie-type test. But for me that is the difference between justice and the lynch mob. What is remarkable about the British victim-relatives (all the ones we have heard from anyway) is that they took a measured view of the criminal enquiry and Megrahi's fate at the very time they might reasonably have been having to cope with all manner of crazy, churned up emotions. But as has been stated here several times, they will have a better chance of finding some kind of peace than those who remain consumed by bitterness, and for whom no amount of revenge will ever be enough.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: robomatic
Date: 01 Sep 09 - 11:44 PM

I think if I felt that the real killer of a loved one due to some one-on-one brutal crime was in stir, I'd want him or her to stay that way. If that person was fatally ill, and I was convinced of same, I'd want a say in compassionate leave for that person and if I had a personal knowledge of his/her family, it is possible that I would be in favor of it. If I felt that a mass killer such as the one in this case, and I had enough personal knowledge to believe him guilty, no way would I want him out under any conditions for any amount of time.

And even if I did, I'd want to know that other victims felt the same, and didn't suffer because of the release.

One of the most fascinating things about crime and punishment is that we as participants and even as onlookers can have vastly different reactions to similar actions based on motive. A man drives over another man because he doesn't see him provokes a different response from us from a man who deliberately drives over someone. Same means, same people, same death. But motive is all important. Because we see ourselves and how we'd feel both as victim and perpetrator.

With something like putting a bomb on an aircraft, I can only see myself on that plane.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 02 Sep 09 - 07:41 AM

Try seeing yourself as al-Megrahi's wife, or one of his children, or grand-children. They are victims too. They've not committed any offence, yet you would punish them exactly as you would punish him. Two wrongs don't make a right.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Rumncoke
Date: 02 Sep 09 - 02:09 PM

I hear a woman on the radio today - a parent of one of the Americans who died.

Well - I write woman for want of a better noun.

The poor creature was nothing but hatred and vilification, nothing humane left. Everything gone from her.

I hear that al Magrahi is deteriorating quite quickly now - he can't have much time left.

Apparently even when he was told that he was being released he was protesting his innocence.

I think that this is a situation in which there can never be a winner - I suspect that it might be difficult, in time to come, to name more than one person who has done anything to maintain the dignity of the Human race in this affaire.

Anne Croucher


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Subject: More Fall Guys?
From: robomatic
Date: 07 Sep 09 - 09:09 PM

Three Found Guilty


I heard a blurb on NPR that Gordon Brown's government was facing great criticism at home over the release of the convicted Lockerbie bomber. I was wondering if the prevalent opinion in favor of 'compassion' was representative or not. Meanwhile, a second trial has found three guilty of planning mass destruction of aircraft in the case that three years ago resulted in many of use who fly having to do without our liquids.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: GUEST,Allan Connochie
Date: 08 Sep 09 - 02:41 AM

"Gordon Brown's govt was facing great criticism at home over the release of the convicted Lockerbie bomber"

The release fell into the lap of the UK government and though they almost certainly wanted it they had no control over it. The UK and Libyan governments wanted a prisoner release programme which was to include the bomber but the Scottish government was against the inclusion of the bomber in any prisoner releases, which put a dampener on it as the Scottish minister had jurisdiction not the minister at UK level. With the advent and worsening of the cancer then under Scots Law the bomber became eligible for release on compassionate grounds. Previously once it was shown someone qualified and the relevant agencies agreed no Scottish Secretary has ever refused a release - though MacAskill could have made a precedent because of the scale of the crime. The idea being thrown about that the Nationalist administration in Edinburgh would covertly aid the Labour administration in Westminster is more than a little unlikely. MacAskill is a lawyer and whether right or wrong he used due process. Brown seemed to have got what he wanted without involvement but of course it doesn't work like that. His refusing to comment and refusal to admit mechanisations at UK level doesn't sit well and makes Labour look ridiculous especially as they were, apart from one individual, condemning the release in the Scottish parliament.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Keith A of Hertford
Date: 16 Mar 10 - 05:20 AM

Seven months later, Gadaffi's son says Megrahi is better than ever.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Keith A of Hertford
Date: 05 Jul 10 - 07:57 AM

The Lockerbie bomber could survive for 10 years or longer, according to a cancer specialist who last year said he would be dead within three months of his release.
No link. Sorry.
Google, telegraph lockerbie


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: catspaw49
Date: 22 Jul 10 - 11:40 AM

Three "Specialists" gave this wasted-ass piece of crap three months to live.....and a year later he's going strong and seemingly getting stronger! And now the BP connection has resurfaced. Both the excerpts below are from the Telegraph website.
Italics mine.

BP is facing fresh scrutiny into whether it was involved in the release of the Lockerbie bomber Abdelbaset Ali Mohmet al-Megrahi, after the oil giant admitted lobbying the British government over a prisoner agreement with Libya. BP admits 'lobbying UK over Libya prisoner transfer scheme but not Lockerbie bomber

AND THIS:

Lockerbie bomber Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi "should have died in jail", David Cameron said as he sought to calm renewed criticism in the United States of his release amid fresh questions over the role played by BP.


Right........and good ol' BP was just protecting their right to drill and make shitloads of money. Gimmee a fuckin' break.........

I agreed with Sinsull from the outset of this thread that there was more to this than met the eye and now a monstrous shit pie has just been thrown in our face by the same wonderful company hell bent on destroying the Gulf of Mexico.

Humanitarian compassion my ass......BIg oil making money.


Spaw


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: mandotim
Date: 22 Jul 10 - 12:55 PM

Spaw and Sinsull, I normally agree with just about everything you post here; but get your facts straight folks; BP did indeed lobby over the prisoner transfer agreement. Megrahi's release was not part of that agreement, as it fell within the jurisdiction of a different Parliament, i.e. The Scottish Parliament, who everyone agrees were NOT lobbied by BP. Besides; as Americans, what the fuck does it have to do with you? Would you let us Brits decide what happens to the 911 perpetrators, if you ever get round to catching them? More Brits died on 911 than Americans died at Lockerbie, remember, and our soldiers are still dying fighting your pointless oil war for you. I'm getting really tired of my country being regarded as some kind of annexe of the USA, and I'm starting to understand why the Arab world is so pissed off with American policy.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: catspaw49
Date: 22 Jul 10 - 01:39 PM

First Tim, I would be all for a "World Oragnization" of some sort being involved in the trials and decisions....or at least a system where countries directly involved have a say in matters such as this.

To me and probably to most Americans, the BP lobbying was suspect regardless. That's a mighty fine hair to split. Part of that distrust comes from the fact that most Americans are fed-up and distrustful of lobbyists for big oil (and a lot of other things) to begin with. No effect? Kinda' hard to believe for me.....but that's just my opinion.

I too find the "war" a pointless effort and I'm not alone in my non-support. I know that the feelings are pretty strong over your way and the best any of us can do is to continue to voice our opinions in any way we can. It doesn't always work even when you think it might. I think this country needs a revolution as our party system has worn itself out. Politics is a matter of methodology and the established method will override the occupants of the offices we elect.

Obama was heralded as "change." It hasn't changed and in my heart I knew it wasn't going to change.....its business as usual. No real movement forward on race or poverty or the economy and we're still fighting a pointless war. I would say to your point about the "annexe"......you have a similar problem.   Change isn't happening because our admin still treats YOU as such and your current admin still acts as such.

William Sloane Coffin said that to be a patriot is to have a lover's quarel with your country and I agree. Most times I love what this country could be and most times I hate what it is.


Spaw


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 22 Jul 10 - 01:49 PM

Two threads on this - here's what I posted on the other one:

The case against Megrahi was pretty suspect anyway. His release was a way of stopping an appeals process which could very well have overthrown that conviction and opened a can of worms.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Donuel
Date: 22 Jul 10 - 02:29 PM

BP has behaved very much like a nation unto themselves. In fact their behavior is much more benign if compared to actions by the United States military and decisions made by our Commander and Chief.
Reagan traded arms for hostages. Johnson supported spraying permanent mutagen poison on Viet Nam. Clinton spewed depleted Uranium oover Bosnia and both Bushs did so even more in Iraq.

Perhaps you don't like trans national corporations to behave like nations but you must have noticed their hiring of armies in numerous proxy wars in Africa and Asia.

As corporations they have no soul to damn and no body to kick but they do have a lifeblood of cash that can be made to bleed.
If you want to fight what a corporation does you can be killed as hundred in Bolivia were shot when Bectel privatized the water supply and made water unaffordable. It was a full fledged war and people died as a result. Corporations are as immortal as nations and will return to ravage each generation for profits that are often unbound by ethics, religion or law.

A less violent rebellion against evil corporate actions is the boycott. The lawsuit is another means that seldom works since time and money are on the side of corporations. Goverment regulations may establish law but then you need to police corporations to inforce the law which is most difficult.

The easiest thing to do is vote for candidates who are for consumer rights.

Foreign owned Fox news and business channels are on the side of corporations about 95% of the time and give a very emotional fear charged view of issues involving Enron heros and Wall Street genius'.

One thing that I have never seen in the Western World is a declaration of war against a corporation. Just look at the investment portfolio of any of the members of the foreign relations committee or the tri lateral commission. Look at the portfolio of the judge who overturned the US government request to cease only the deep water drilling that can't be reached by human hands.
Nope you can't commit war against a corporation yet they commit wars and unilateral decisions that kill, maim and bankrupt private individuals every day.

Free market you say? Look at the result of their free for all.
BP is a bit worse than most too big to fail corporations that routinely lie cheat steal and distort of a buck. They say Obama's government is out of touch. I say you need only take one look and listen to Tony Hayward to see who is out of touch.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: mandotim
Date: 22 Jul 10 - 04:34 PM

Spaw; that's why I normally agree with just about everything you say on here; great reply to an overreacting and angry poster like me. I love it when you do 'voice of sweet reason', and please don't take my anger personally; that's not how it was meant, and never will be. I think my quarrel is exactly as you suggest; with my own government for their supine and feckless acceptance of interference in sovereign matters.
Tim


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 22 Jul 10 - 05:30 PM

Don't forget that our PM said, we are the junior party!

Fucking Etonian eedjit!


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: mousethief
Date: 22 Jul 10 - 05:54 PM

Besides; as Americans, what the fuck does it have to do with you?

Americans were killed on that flight. Ergo, it has to do with America.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Les from Hull
Date: 22 Jul 10 - 06:12 PM

The case against this bloke was remarkably thin, but no one in the USA seems to belive this read this

Many people who have looked into this seem to believe that Iran had a greater motive for destroying an American 'plane, in revenge for the Iran airliner destroyed (by a tragic mistake) by USS Vincennes in 1988.

My heart goes out to the families and friends of all the people who were killed by this useless sabre-rattling.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: mandotim
Date: 23 Jul 10 - 02:07 AM

More British people were killed in 9/11. How would Americans react if we started telling you how to run your justice system and hauling your President in front of our legislators to explain himself?


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: mousethief
Date: 23 Jul 10 - 03:12 PM

More British people were killed in 9/11. How would Americans react if we started telling you how to run your justice system and hauling your President in front of our legislators to explain himself?

Has somebody hauled your PM in front of our legislators? Since our legislature has no subpoena power over foreign heads of government, if s/he stood before them, it had to have been voluntarily.

Maybe you're not familiar with it in Blighty but in America we have this thing called "freedom of speech." Meaning people can complain about Scottish justice all they want. You guys might want to look it up; it might be worth trying, if you can stomach it.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 23 Jul 10 - 04:05 PM

Maybe if the captain of USS Vincennes had been put on trial the Lockerbie atrocity might never have happened.

Instead he was given the Legion of Merit decoration "for exceptionally meritorious conduct in the performance of outstanding service as commanding officer ... from April 1987 to May 1989" - the period during which the Iranian Airbus 655 was shot down, with 290 civilian passengers killed.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: katlaughing
Date: 23 Jul 10 - 04:25 PM

RANT ON:

Maybe we can all shut the fuck up and quit using any tragedy which comes along to bring out the worst in each society; a tit-for-tat response gets so tedious and plays into the hands of those who love to divide, demoralize, and conquer in subtle and not so subtle ways. Yeah, I know we have our differences, it'd be damn boring if we didn't, BUT that does not mean we cannot join together to make the world a better place, starting right here in our own collective *home*, eh?

How far back do you want to go? I am sure we could dredge up stuff from a lot farther back than 1988...maybe we could work it up into an all out pissing contest as they've been having for thousands of years in the middle east? Your king probably ordered the hanging of one of my ancestors...how 'bout we start there? Sheesh!

Rant OFF

kathotandtiredofMudcatspats


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: mandotim
Date: 24 Jul 10 - 03:40 AM

Mousethief; I think Spaw was right; my quarrel is not with the US legislators, they have every right to ask for Cameron to meet them, although given the current world view of your country, this can easily be misconstrued as arrogance. My quarrel is with the craven lickspittle who agreed to meet, instead of politely saying 'mind your own business, this is a sovereign matter'. I was merely trying to point out the reverse situation; I can't see a US President agreeing to such a thing, can you? As far as freedom of speech goes, I'm not sure the USA has much to crow about. Remember the Dixie Chicks? Further back, McCarthy? True freedom of speech is an illusion in most societies, including the UK, and is generally the preserve of those who can afford expensive lawyers. I suspect it's going to become much more illusory over here with this bunch in charge.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: robomatic
Date: 24 Jul 10 - 07:43 PM

Well, the forces of enforced forgiveness have been able to justify a convicted terrorist returned to his loved ones, for what appear to be inaccurate, if not fabricated, justifications.

They should get on to the case of Nezar Hindawi who was incarcerated in 1988 for sending his Irish Catholic girlfriend onto an El Al flight with his baby in her belly and his semtex in her handbag. Questioning by the Israelis brought the truth to light and led to the capture of Hindawi.

He's already been up for parole but for some insane reason the forces of forgiveness were not strong enough. . .

They can find that strength in this thread which is bound to find that Hindawi and his familty (the ones he didn't try to kill) have suffered enough.

Oh the humanity!


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: mousethief
Date: 24 Jul 10 - 07:59 PM

I'm not sure the USA has much to crow about. Remember the Dixie Chicks? Further back, McCarthy?

Freedom of speech really has to do with the government, so the Dixie Chicks really don't signify. Consumers are of course allowed to boycott anyone or anything they please based on things said; the DC were unfortunate (or remiss) in that their fan base was way way to their right. Of course their fan base had bought into the Bush lies that criticizing the president was the same as criticizing the country. The same people have conveniently forgotten they ever believed that now that a Democrat is in the White House; they will suddenly remember it next time a Republican president is elected.

McCarthy was an aberration, although chillingly the Republicans look like they want to go back in that direction. They had one or two nutcases (whom the sheeple nevertheless elected) who have said things about "unamerican" this or that. I fear for people of my political beliefs if the Rethugs ever regain both chambers of Congress and the presidency. The Patriot Act will look like a bill of rights.

I understand the accusation of arrogance. US officialdom really has a bad case of it, and nobody more than Congress. And I agree an American president would probably not have done the same under analogous circumstances. Nor should Cameron have.


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Subject: BS: Cardinal comments on Lockerbie bomber reaction
From: Arthur_itus
Date: 08 Aug 10 - 06:43 AM

It's not very often I approve of what comes out of religious leaders mouths (not being religious myself), but for once, I found myself agreeing with this gentleman.

Here is the link to the article


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-10905562


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Subject: RE: BS: CardinalO'Brien on US Lockerbie reaction
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 08 Aug 10 - 06:49 AM

I agree too. It also sits ill with me, that this witch hunt by these US senators is in the furtherance of their political carreers, and has nothing to do with morality. Rather the reverse in fact.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 08 Aug 10 - 05:24 PM

Well that seems to have buried Arthur's thread quite successfully


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: gnu
Date: 08 Aug 10 - 05:39 PM

Well, John... it's just so inane and arrogant of the US politicians to even dream up such crap, let alone grandstand about it. I suspect Yanks whose reps are involved with this shite are rather pissed about them spending their tax money like uneducated boobs rather than attending to business that matters and that they could actually "do" something about. Twits.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Arthur_itus
Date: 08 Aug 10 - 05:49 PM

Indeed John.

I didn't want it included on this thread. I wanted to discuss what the Cardinal had to say about America and although related to Lockerbie, it really has other implications, about how the rest of the world see the Yanks.

I will not be discussing any further on this thread. Thanks a lot Mudcat elfs. :-(


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 08 Aug 10 - 07:38 PM

A comment by Alex Salmon, the Scottish First Minister, is perhaps relevant in the context of the concerns raised by those complaining that al Megrahi has lived longer than predicted at the time of his release:

"I'm not a doctor, but I think it's entirely possible that life expectancy in Greenock (Prison)is somewhat shorter than someone's life expectancy on progressive drugs and treatment in Tripoli."

The average age for men who die of natural causes while in prison in the UK is 56.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 09 Aug 10 - 09:28 AM

Yes well, I could see the difference in aspect, from this largely redundant thread, too.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 09 Aug 10 - 09:34 AM

Eh?
Are yo' lot communicating by ESP or summat. None of the above makes any sense at all.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: catspaw49
Date: 29 Aug 11 - 09:31 AM

Well here we are two years later and the fucker is still alive but supposedly on life support. We are now asked to feel pity for him as someone has stolen his meds in the classy and lavish secured home where he lives.

Ya' know, to be absolutely truthful, it would be impossible for me to feel pity for this guy if Lorena Bobbitt showed up and chopped off his dick.


Spaw


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 29 Aug 11 - 10:06 AM

If he's guilty... That is a very big if, and some of those who think he wasn't include parents of victims of the bombing.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: catspaw49
Date: 29 Aug 11 - 10:21 AM

If you recall this thread Mac, I felt then that something was missing in this whole thing but at this juncture, I've lost all ability to give even one shit, let alone two..............


Spaw


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Little Robyn
Date: 29 Aug 11 - 09:45 PM

They've found him at home, in a coma most of the time. I think he's about to face his maker.
Robyn


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: GUEST,999
Date: 29 Aug 11 - 09:47 PM

Sounds good.


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Charley Noble
Date: 30 Aug 11 - 07:35 AM

I don't recall anyone "asking to fell pity for him" but the current report concludes that he's not long for this world. He did get an extra two or three years of "quality time" with his family and I suppose that is good reason for resentment. But he was dying on pancreatic cancer, no bed of roses.

I'm assuming he at least knew who gave the orders.

Charley Noble


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: catspaw49
Date: 30 Aug 11 - 08:53 AM

You missed the news report where his son whined about the meds with that "pity poor us" voice..............and yeah, I'd bet the farm this guy knew the details.

Spaw


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Subject: RE: BS: Lockerbie bombing fall-guy to go free?
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 30 Aug 11 - 10:19 AM

Megrahi is innocent. All the evidence you need is out there. Yanks all over the crash scene within hours, degrading the evidence. Gauchi, the only real witness of substance, the Maltese shopkeeper bought by the yanks for two million dollars, his "testimony" inconsistent and all over the place. Libya admitting to the bombing just to get sanctions lifted. The real tragedy is that the real killers are still out there and that justice has not been done. Not to speak of one of the most egregious miscarriages of justice in modern times.

http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/christine-grahame-almegrahi-is-home-and-he-is-innocent-1776188.html


http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/aug/18/lockerbie-bomber-megrahi-libyan-conflict


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