The
Lockerbie Trial in The MaltaMedia Daily Online News Service archives
Al Megrahi
starts serving life sentence written by Darrell Pace
- 15 Mar, 2002
Libyan
Abdel Basset Al Megrahi on Friday woke up for the first time at the
Scottish maximum security prison of Barlinnie Prison, Glasgow at the
start of his life imprisonment sentence after Scottish judges turned
down his appeal.
Megrahi
was flown there by helicopter on Thursday evening, hours after Lord
Justice General Lord Cullen said that the appeals judges had concluded
that none of the grounds of appeal presented by the convicted Lockerbie
bomber were well-founded.
"The
appeal will accordingly be refused. This brings proceedings to an end."
he concluded.
A trail
jury made up of three Scottish Judges had found Megrahi guilty of placing
the bomb that downed a Pan Am Boeing 747 over the Scottish town of Lockerbie
in 1988. 270 people perished in that disaster. He was then sentenced
to life in prison, and must serve at least twenty years in a Scottish
jail.
Megrahi's
imprisonment will be monitored closely by the United Nations. U.N. Secretary-General
Kofi Annan said his office would now enter into "appropriate arrangements"
agreed previously with British authorities to monitor the conditions
of the imprisonment.
A spokesperson
for Annan said that the Secretary General hoped that with Thursday's
court decision, the time had come when suffering families of the victims
"can at last close this tragic chapter in their lives."
Libya criticised
the ruling. The Foreign Ministry compared al Megrahi to a "Jesus
Christ of modern times."
"The
verdict confirms once again that the United States and Britain have
imposed their sway on the court to enforce a political verdict,"
a statement read.
The Libyan
government went on to say that Libya wanted compensation for losses
inflicted on Libyans by U.N. sanctions, imposed to force it to hand
over Megrahi and another suspect in the Lockerbie attack.
The United
States, in turn, urged Libya to take the remaining steps so sanctions
could be lifted - by admitting responsibility for the bombing and paying
compensation to families of victims. Libya has already committed itself
to paying compensation, even in the eventuality of Al Megrahi being
acquitted by the appeals jury.
Some relatives
of the victims who died in the attack said the end of legal proceedings
gave them some satisfaction, but the tragedy would continue to haunt
them.
Meanwhile,
Thursday's ruling was severely criticised by one of five U.N. observers
who followed the trial as part of the deal with Libya.
Hans Koechler
described the ruling as a miscarriage of justice. "My impression
is that justice was not done and that we are dealing here with a rather
spectacular case of a miscarriage of justice," he told BBC Radio
Scotland.
"I
am not convinced at all that the sequence of events that led to this
explosion of the plane over Scotland was as described by the court.
Everything that is presented is only circumstantial evidence,"
he said.
Megrahi's
only avenue of appeal under the Scottish legal system is the Judicial
Committee of the Privy Council, which sits in London, and has a supervisory
jurisdiction over constitutional matters within the UK.
Al Megrahi
loses Lockerbie appeal written by Darrell Pace -
14 Mar, 2002
Five
Scottish judges have refused the appeal of the Libyan Abdel Basset al-Megrahi
arguing that none of the grounds of his appeal were well-founded.

Delivering
a verdict almost a month after the jury finished hearing the appeal
at the Scottish court in the Netherlands, the head of the jury, Lord
Justice General Lord Cullen said "For the reasons given in the
opinion, in which we all concur, we have concluded that none of the
grounds of appeal is well-founded.
"The
appeal will accordingly be refused. This brings proceedings to an end."
he concluded.
A trail
jury made up of three Scottish Judges had found Megrahi guilty of placing
the bomb that downed a Pan Am Boeing 747 over the Scottish town of Lockerbie
in 1988. 270 people perished in that disaster. He was then sentenced
to life in prison, and must serve at least twenty years in a Scottish
jail.
Megrahi
is now set to be flown by helicopter to Scotland at a specially-built
jail at a maximum security in Barlinnie Prison, Glasgow.
Relatives
of the 270 victims of the tragedy were reported to be relieved at the
ruling of the appeal judges. Megrahi, on the other hand remained straight-faced
while his wife wept in the court.
Megrahi's
only avenue of appeal under the Scottish legal system is the Judicial
Committee of the Privy Council, which sits in London, and has a supervisory
jurisdiction over constitutional matters within the UK.
Lawyers
for former Libyan secret agent in the appeal had urged the judges to
reject Megrahi's guilty verdict. Their reasoning was based on evidence
from six new witnesses during 14 days of hearings earlier this year.
The defence claimed that the new evidence shows that the original guilty
verdict was a miscarriage of justice.
The appeal
focused on two areas crucial to Megrahi's conviction: where the bomb
was originally loaded and evidence from a Maltese shopowner, Tony Gauci,
who said he sold Megrahi clothes found wrapped round the suitcase bomb.
One of
the new testimonies in the appeal came from a former security guard
who said that he had found evidence of a break-in at London's Heathrow
airport the night before the tragedy. The testimony contradicted the
crown's original thesis that the bomb was first loaded on an Air Malta
flight to Frankfurt.
Prosecutors,
however, said the new evidence was "flawed and weak," saying
that an airport baggage worker eager to go home probably broke open
a security door at Heathrow.
The appeal
ruling effectively confirms that the bomb that destroyed the airliner
did in fact leave from Malta.
Lockerbie
appeal verdict set for 14th March written
by Darrell Pace - 5 Mar, 2002
The destiny of Abdel Basset al-Megrahi, the Libyan convicted last year
for the Lockerbie bombing, will be revealed next Thursday when five
Scottish judges will rule on the appeal of the former secret agent.
A
trail jury made up of three Scottish Judges had found Megrahi guilty
of placing the bomb that downed a Pan Am Boeing 747 over the Scottish
town of Lockerbie in 1988. 270 people perished in that disaster. He
was then sentenced to life in prison, and must serve at least twenty
years in a Scottish jail.
Scotland's
authorities said Tuesday said that the Scottish judges who heard the
appeal will deliver their ruling on Thursday 14th March.
Lawyers
for former Libyan secret agent have urged the judges to reject Megrahi's
guilty verdict. Their reasoning was based on evidence from six new witnesses
during 14 days of hearings earlier this year. The defence claims that
the new evidence shows that the original guilty verdict was a miscarriage
of justice.
The appeal
focused on two areas crucial to Megrahi's conviction: where the bomb
was originally loaded and evidence from a Maltese shopowner, Tony Gauci,
who said he sold Megrahi clothes found wrapped round the suitcase bomb.
One of
the new testimonies in the appeal came from a former security guard
who said that he had found evidence of a break-in at London's Heathrow
airport the night before the tragedy. The testimony contradicts the
crown's original thesis that the bomb was first loaded on an Air Malta
flight to Frankfurt.
Prosecutors,
however, said the new evidence was "flawed and weak," saying
that an airport baggage worker eager to go home probably broke open
a security door at Heathrow.
Journalist
says CIA drug line linked to Lockerbie written
by Darrell Pace - 4 Mar, 2002
Scottish
investigative journalist Ian Ferguson in an interview published in an
Egyptian newspaper said that he believes that the running of the secret
drug line operated between the Middle East and Europe in 1988 could
be linked to the disaster.
Ferguson
is the journalist who revealed that Maltese shopkeeper Tony Gauci had
received free holidays to Scotland compliments of the Scottish police.
He is one of the few journalists who are still coming up with new leads
in the case.
Speaking
to Al- Ahram Weekly Ferguson said that his investigations into the bombing
have often come under fire since he started work into the case in 1991.
One such
case was when he was probing an alleged secret drug line run by the
Central Intelligence Agency in 1988 between the Middle East and Europe.
Ferguson told Al-Ahram that when he was putting together a radio documentary
about the Lockerbie bombing for American public broadcasting, his colleagues
at the Washington desk pressured him to cut the part about the drug
running. Meanwhile, he was also receiving threats. "I know I have
been followed whilst making the documentary, and that telephone calls
were intercepted," he says. "When my wife phoned me in Switzerland,
she heard a voice saying: 'American wife of the journalist, we are watching
you'." Ferguson says the drug case and the threats are clearly
linked. "Every time I got near something to do with that case,
the threats would increase."
In his
book Cover-up of Convenience, which was released last year, Ferguson
says that the Libyan defendant Abdel-Basset Al-Megrahi who is appealing
his conviction for the attack, is not guilty. He believes that the two
Libyans that the original two defendants of the trial were fall guys
in a web of political intrigue.
In his
interview with Al- Ahram Weekly Ferguson was also critical of the Scottish
judges in the case, who he maintains never gave Al- Megrahi the benefit
of the doubt. He dismisses the defence as "very weak," and
blames the defence team for not using his scoop about Gauci's Scottish
holiday to further their case.
His main
frustration in Al-Megrahi's conviction, however, is that the real culprits
have been allowed to escape. "Justice will only be done when the
real people responsible are caught and prosecuted. But the problem there
is, the truth lies with the secret services, especially in the United
States," he said.
Libya
will pay compensation to Lockerbie victims' families
written by MM News - 1 Mar, 2002
A
son of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi has been quoted saying that Libya
agreed to pay compensation to families of the 1988 Lockerbie bombing
victims even if the former Libyan agent convicted of the attack is acquitted
on appeal.
Reuters
quoted Seif el Islam in a news conference in Paris saying there was
no link between the agent's criminal trial and the civil case.
Seif el
Islam said that Libyan government representatives were in talks with
relatives of the 270 victims in the French capital but an agreement
had not yet been reached and Libya was resisting demands for $4 billion.
Islam compared
the reasoning to O.J. Simpson's case during the press conference. The
former American football star, was acquitted of murdering his estranged
wife and her friend in a celebrated trial in 1995. But two years later
a civil court ordered him to pay $33.5 million in compensation to the
victims' families.
"It
is the law of the jungle," Gaddafi's son said. "It's unfair
but we have to be realistic and realize we are dealing with a superpower.
It's the United States not Malta."
In an interview
with newspaper Asharq al-Awsat published on Thursday, Seif el Islam
said he expected talks to be wrapped up within five months but no payment
would be made before a verdict had been reached on Megrahi's appeal.
Lockerbie
appeal ends
written by MM News - 15 Feb, 2002
The Lockerbie appeal court on Thursday heard the last witnesses,
bringing the appeal to an end. The witnesses were brought to the stand
by the prosecution in an effort to counter a theory suggested by the
defence that the bomb was put on flight Pan Am 103 in London, not Malta.
Defence
lawyer William Taylor on Wednesday put a former security guard at Heathrow
airport, and a superior, to testify that had found that a door leading
to a baggage storage area had been opened, the night before the tragedy
on December 20, 1988.
Taylor
contends that the break-in shows the bomb could have been smuggled on
board the New York-bound plane in London.
But prosecution
witnesses on Thursday, however testified that airport staff at Heathrow
occasionally forced open a door to a baggage area to take a shortcut,
undermining the defence theory that the bomb was planted by an intruder
at Heathrow.
The defence
however says that the door carried no signs of kicking, indicating that
it had been forced open. Guard Raymond Manly and his supervisor, Philip
Radley, testified that the break-in looked like a professional job and
had reported it to the police.
The five
judges of the appeal have retired to decide on Abdelbasset ali Mohmed
al-Megrahi's fate.
New
testimony heard in Lockerbie appeal written by Darrell
Pace - 13 Feb, 2002
A
new witness in the appeal of a Libyan found guilty of masterminding
the Lockerbie bombing said that he found that a baggage store padlock
had been "cut like butter" the night before the tragedy.
The five
Scottish judges of the appeal started hearing the testimony of Ray Manly,
a former Heathrow Airport security guard on Wednesday. Manly was called
to the witness stand by the defence team of Abdelbasset ali Mohmed al-Megrahi
in its efforts to prove that the bomb that downed the Pan Am airliner
did not start its deadly journey in Malta, as the prosecution alleged
in the trial.
Manly was
on a night shift in Terminal 3 on the night of 20/21 December 1988.
In his testimony, he told the Scottish Court in the Netherlands that
the doors separating landside from airside were unmanned at night after
they had been locked. He noticed that one of the padlocks was broken
during one of his rounds.
"The
padlock was on the floor. In my opinion it was as if it had been cut
like butter - very professional," Manly told the judges. The court
was also shown Mr Manly's security report, written soon after the incident
in which he described the break-in as "a very deliberate act, leaving
easy access to airside". Manly was only interviewed by anti-terrorist
squad police officers about the incident the following January, after
the Lockerbie disaster.
Philip
Radley, a superior of Manly at the time also took to the stand on Wednesday.
He said that the doors were secured by a 4ft long iron bar and a heavy-duty
padlock and security guards were on duty on each side.
Megrahi's
defence asks for admission of new evidence
Lawyers
defending Abdel Basset Ali al-Megrahi, the Libyan convicted of masterminding
the bombing of a Pan Am airliner over the Scottish town on Lockerbie
in 1988 has asked an appeals court to admit new evidence showing that
lax security at Heathrow airport could have allowed the bomb to be loaded
onto the aircraft from there.
The new
evidence comes in the form of an affidavit by a former security guard
at Heathrow airport who found that a gate leading to a luggage depot
had been forced on December 21, 1988 the night of the tragedy.
The guard, Ray Manly had never testified in the trial. He had been interviewed
by the police a month after the bombing but his testimony was not pursued
further and Megrahis defence only came to know about the testimony
after the conviction last year.
The five
appeal judges will rule on the defences request to admit the new
evidence on Tuesday.
Meanwhile,
defence attorney William Taylor on Thursday continued dissecting the
trials written verdict. He told the court said that the crucial
testimony of Paul Gauci, the brother of shopkeeper Tony Gauci could
have shed further light on the date when Megrahi allegedly made the
purchase of clothes from Marys House. The defence lawyer however
said that Paul Gaucis testimony was never heard by the court.
Taylor also argued that the accomplice required by Megrahi to load the
luggage carrying the bomb onto an Air Malta flight to Frankfurt was
never identified by the prosecution.
The denial
of Tony Gaucis testimony, the tearing down of the theory that
the bomb left from Malta and the admission of the new evidence are the
three main arguments of the defence in this appeal.
The court
has adjourned till Tuesday.
Lawyer says Gauci's
identification of Megrahi was prejudiced
The accuracy
of the testimony of Maltese shopkeeper Tony Gauci that weighed heavily
on the Lockerbie verdict - finding a Libyan guilty of bombing a Pan
Am airliner in 1988 continued to be the focal point when the appeal
of Abdel Basset Ali al-Megrahi continued on Monday.
Attorney
William Taylor this time claimed that Tony Gaucis identification
of Megrahi as the Libyan who had bought clothes from his shop was unreliable
because the witness was prejudiced after seeing a picture of the Libyan
in a magazine. The defence argues that Gauci had seen the photograph
and read the article claiming that Megrahi was a main suspect. This,
the defence says, led Gauci to single out the Libyan from a line up
in April 1999, more than ten years after the bombing. Taylor also pointed
out that there were discrepancies in Guacis earlier statements
to police regarding Megrahis height and age.
Meanwhile,
the British media gave more fuel to the theory that Megrahi was being
framed on Sunday when a report claimed that Gauci had been taken to
Lockerbie to be shown the damage caused by the mid-air explosion of
Pan Am flight 103 by the Scottish police. The allegation caused uproar
in the British Parliament with MP Tam Dalyell saying that he wanted
the government to respond to the claim.
Megrahi's
defence continues to dissect Gauci's testimony
Lawyers
defending the Libyan convicted for the Lockerbie bombing during his
appeal continued dissecting the testimony of Maltese shop owner, Tony
Gauci, during the trial in a bid to show that the presiding judges of
the trial had ignored contradictory evidence in the testimony.
Gauci had
identified Megrahi as the Libyan who bought clothes from his shop, Mary's
House in Sliema, that are thought to have been placed around the bomb
that downed Pan Am flight 103 over the Scottish town of Lockerbie on
December 21, 1988. It was the only witness account directly linking
the Megrahi to the contents of the suitcase where the bomb was packed.
Gauci, however, could not pinpoint the exact date when the purchase
had been made.
Defence
attorney William Taylor on Friday the third day of the appeal
- went to great lengths to explain that Gauci during his testimony had
indicated two dates. Gauci had testified he sold the clothing about
one week before the Dec. 21, 1988, attack, when Megrahi was known to
be in Malta. Taylor cited ambiguities in Gauci's account about the exact
date when a man resembling al-Megrahi was in the shop, contradicting
himself on whether Christmas decorations were already up. He said that
the court should have recorded the contradiction instead of ignoring
one of the versions.
Taylor
also questioned the credibility of Gauci's identification of al-Megrahi
from a photograph he was shown more than two years after the purchase,
which did not match the description of the buyer that he gave investigators
earlier. (MM)
Maltese
shop owner's testimony rebuffed by Megrahi's defence
The testimony
of Maltese shop owner, Tony Gauci, during the Lockerbie trial last year
took centre-stage during the second day of the appeal of Libyan Abdel
Basset al-Megrahi. Gauci, who ran the shop Marys House in Sliema
at the time, had identified Megrahi as the person bought garments that
were packed around the bomb that downed a Pan Am aircraft over the Scottish
town of Lockerbie in 1988 killing 270 people.
William
Taylor - one of the lawyers defending Megrahi - on Thursday quoted the
written judgement of the judges who had found Megrahi guilty of the
bombing saying that the judgement read that Gaucis identification
of Megrahi was not unequivocal and was reliable so
far as it went. The defence also said that the court was in error
when saying that the same clothes were bought on December 7, 1988. Taylor
said that that the trial judges guilty verdict was weighted upon
these two elements.
Lockerbie
appeal begins
The
Lockerbie tragedy which left 270 people dead after a Pan Am Boeing 747
airliner exploded in mid-air over the Scottish town of Lockerbie in
1988 took the worlds news centre-stage on Wednesday as a panel
of five Scottish judges started hearing an appeal of a Libyan that was
convicted for the bombing last year.
The appeal
started exactly at 10:10 CET. The defence and prosecution addressed
the panel of judges about which way they deemed fit for the appeal to
proceed.
The defence
team then submitted a nine-page document detailing the grounds of the
appeal. William Taylor, one of Megrahis lawyers told the five
appeal judges he intended to show that the trial judges had effectively
misdirected themselves as jurors and led to a miscarriage of justice.
He said that he would be questioning the trial judges' written verdict
and proposed bringing in fresh evidence that will cast doubt on Megrahi's
conviction. Taylor argued that the evidence had not been available at
the time of the trial and brought several examples from cases handled
by the Scottish juduciary when new evidence was allowed in an appeal.
Alan Turnbull QC, for the Crown, on the other hand, argued that the
evidence was not sufficient to justify being heard in the appeal.
The fresh
evidence that the defence will try to introduce could clear Abdel Basset
al-Megrahis name and - more importantly for Malta - prove that
the suitcase carrying the bomb did not start its deadly journey on a
Frankfurt-bound Air Malta flight from Luqa.
Should
the court approve the admission of the new evidence, the defence will
be intent on proving that the suitcase was first loaded at Heathrow
airport, from where the Pan Am flight departed. The defence's case will
almost certainly revolve around the testimony of a security guard at
Heathrow who claims that a luggage bay had been broken into that same
night of the bombing. The guard had only come forward with his testimony
in March 2001, only after the Scottish judges of the nine-month trial
had found Megrahi guilty.
Two weeks
ago, the Court that will hear the appeal led by Scotland's top judge
- Lord Cullen - gave the go-ahead for its broadcast on the internet.
The British Broadcasting Corporation started live coverage of the appeal
on its website at 9:00 GMT (10:00 CET) on Wednesday. (MM) [Wed 23/1/02
- 16:21:01 CET]
Convicted
Lockerbie bomber owes thousands of Pounds to lawyers
The Lockerbie
tragedy which left 270 people dead after a Pan Am Boeing 747 airliner
exploded in mid-air over the Scottish town of Lockerbie in 1988 took
the worlds news centre-stage on Wednesday as a panel of five Scottish
judges started hearing an appeal of a Libyan that was convicted for
the bombing last year.
The appeal
started exactly at 10:10 CET. The defence and prosecution addressed
the panel of judges about which way they deemed fit for the appeal to
proceed.
The defence
team then submitted a nine-page document detailing the grounds of the
appeal. William Taylor, one of Megrahis lawyers told the five
appeal judges he intended to show that the trial judges had effectively
misdirected themselves as jurors and led to a miscarriage of justice.
He said that he would be questioning the trial judges' written verdict
and proposed bringing in fresh evidence that will cast doubt on Megrahi's
conviction. Taylor argued that the evidence had not been available at
the time of the trial and brought several examples from cases handled
by the Scottish juduciary when new evidence was allowed in an appeal.
Alan Turnbull QC, for the Crown, on the other hand, argued that the
evidence was not sufficient to justify being heard in the appeal.
The fresh
evidence that the defence will try to introduce could clear Abdel Basset
al-Megrahis name and - more importantly for Malta - prove that
the suitcase carrying the bomb did not start its deadly journey on a
Frankfurt-bound Air Malta flight from Luqa.
Should
the court approve the admission of the new evidence, the defence will
be intent on proving that the suitcase was first loaded at Heathrow
airport, from where the Pan Am flight departed. The defence's case will
almost certainly revolve around the testimony of a security guard at
Heathrow who claims that a luggage bay had been broken into that same
night of the bombing. The guard had only come forward with his testimony
in March 2001, only after the Scottish judges of the nine-month trial
had found Megrahi guilty.
Two weeks
ago, the Court that will hear the appeal led by Scotland's top judge
- Lord Cullen - gave the go-ahead for its broadcast on the internet.
The British Broadcasting Corporation started live coverage of the appeal
on its website at 9:00 GMT (10:00 CET) on Wednesday. (MM) [Tue 22/1/02
- 10:06:13 CET]
Lockerbie
appeal to be heard in January
The Libyan
convicted for being the hand behind the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103
over the Scottish town of Lockerbie in 1988 will have an appeal against
his conviction heard as from January next year.
A Scottish
Appeals Court meeting in the Netherlands, where the trial first took
place has given Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed Al Megrahi's counsel four weeks
to lodge the outlines of its arguments. The defence team is claiming
that it will be presenting a barrage of new evidence during the appeal.
The prosecution
side has also been given four weeks to present counter arguments. The
Camp Zeist court will begin to hear the case on 23 January.
(MM) [Tue 16/10/01 - 00:14:14 CET]
New
twist to Lockerbie case as relatives and friends re-live tragedy
A former
security guard at Heathrow airport says he discovered a break-in at
a Pan Am baggage facility early on the day that 270 people died in the
bombing of a New York-bound jumbo jet, the English newspaper The Mirror
reported.
This revelation
came as friends and relatives of the victims of the Pan Am tragedy were
shocked at the extent of the loss of life on Tuesday and had to relive
the deaths of their loved ones almost 13 years ago.
Ray Manly,
63, was quoted as saying he was surprised the incident was not mentioned
during the trial of two Libyans for the bombing, Manly's statement suggested
the possibility that the bomb was sneaked into a luggage area in London.
The trial
found Abdel Basset Al Megrahi, a Libyan intelligence agent, guilty of
the bombing that killed 270 people on board Pan AM flight 103 and on
the Scottish town of Lockerbie in December 1988. He was sentenced to
life imprisonment. A co-defendant, Lamen Khalifa Fhimah, manager of
the Libyan Arab Airlines station in Malta, was acquitted
The Scottish
Office, the government executive office in Scotland, said that it could
not comment on the report because an appeal by Al Megrahi is pending.
The hearing will start on the 15th October. (MM) [Thur 13/9/01 - 15:02:59
CET]
Details
of Lockerbie appeal revealed
The team
of top-notch lawyers who are representing a Libyan convicted for planting
the bomb that downed Pan Am Flight 103 have revealed details of an appeal
they intend to file in October.
Miami attorney
Frank Rubino said he and the other lawyers defending Abdel Basset al-Megrahi
will focus on security issues at the airports of Frankfurt and Malta,
to determine whether the suitcase with the bomb inside it had started
its journey from Luqa Airport. The appeal will also allege that the
court took into consideration only part of the testimony of Tony Gauci,
the Maltese merchant who said he sold clothes that were packed inside
the suitcase with the bomb to Megrahi from the outlet Mary's House in
Sliema.
A Scottish
court in January had convicted Megrahi of the murder of 270 people in
the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103. The bomb exploded over Lockerbie 33
minutes after the Boeing 747 left Heathrow for New York.
Rubino
said the appeal would be filed at Camp Zeist in the Netherlands, the
site were the original trial was held. (MM) [Tue 28/8/01 - 15:55:31
CET]
Law
professor has doubts about Lockerbie verdict
International
reports say that Harvard law Professor Alan Dershowitz, hired to help
in an appeal, said that he has doubts about the conviction of a Libyan
intelligence agent in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103.
Malta features
prominently in the trial as the prosecution insisted that the bomb that
brought down the flight originated from Malta.
Dershowitz
said he has been hired as a consultant by a British law firm for an
appeal on behalf of Abdel Basset Al Megrahi, who was sentenced to life
imprisonment by a Scottish court last January. Al Megrahi was found
guilty of masterminding the bombing from Malta.
The Scottish
Court, sitting in the Netherlands, acquitted co-defendant Lamen Khalifa
Fhimah, a Libyan Arab Airlines official, of all charges in the bombing
that killed 270 people.
Dershowitz
said he has questions about the reliability of an eyewitness account
that alleged that Megrahi bought incriminating items of clothing in
Malta two weeks before the Dec. 21, 1988, bombing over Lockerbie, Scotland.
He said he fears "that the wrong person may well have been convicted
of the crime."
(MM) [Fri 10/8/01 - 14:33:54 CET]
Maltese
witnesses intimidated in Lockerbie trial
Maltese
journalist Joe Mifsud revealed that Maltese witnesses in the Lockerbie
trial were intimidated by the prosecution before giving their witness
during the trial in Camp Zeist, the Netherlands.
He was
speaking during the first edition of the new current affairs programme
Wara l-Ahbar (After the News), broadcast every Monday at 1800 CET on
ir-Radju ta' l-Universita' and webcast on MaltaMedia.
Joe Mifsud,
the Maltese journalist who took most interest in the case for many years,
said the judges were wrong in giving a guilty verdict to Abdel Basset
Al Megrahi, blaming him for the bombing that left 270 people dead in
1988. He also said that Malta has been cleared of all suspicion in the
case. He said that the other Libyan acquitted in the verdict, Al Amin
Khalifa Fhimah, sent in a letter where he expressed his appreciation
for the support shown by the Maltese who always believed in his innocence,
and expressed his wish to come back to Malta among friends, where he
worked for many years as station manager for Libyan Arab Airlines. [Tue
06/2/01 - 00:43:17 CET]
One
Libyan convicted, one acquitted in Lockerbie trial
The 3 judges
in the Lockerbie trial sentenced Abdel Baset Al Megrahi to life in prison
after finding him unanimously guilty of the 1988 Pan Am jet bombing
that left 270 people dead. A second defendant int the case Al Amin Khalifa
Fhimah was found unanimously not guilty of the same charge. Al Megrahi
was put on trial under Scottish law in a Scottish court set up at Camp
Zeist in the Netherlands. Fhimah is a free man and is expected to be
flown back to his home country in United Nations plane this afternoon.
The verdict
was delivered on Wednesday at 1100 CET while Al Megrahi's sentence was
given at 1400 CET. Megrahi must serve at least 20 years in prison to
be eligible for parole. His lawyers have already appealed the case but
this could take as long as year before it gets underway. Megrahi was
chief security officer for Libyan Arab Airlines at Luqa Airport at the
time of the bombing.
Meanwhile,
the full verdict has been put online here . In it the judges state that
the prosecutors have proven beyond reasonable doubt that the suitcase
that contained the bomb had t-shirts bought in Malta in it and that
the person who bought those garments was a Libyan.
Interviewed
on U.S. TV channel CNN International, the Libyan Ambassador to the U.N.,
Abduzed Dorda, said his country was shocked by the verdict but will
respect it. He denied the involvement of the Libyan government in the
case and said that the prosecutors did not venture into those grounds
because they could not prove it.
The United
States said that the verdict does not mean the end of sanctions against
Libya. A spokesperson for British Prime Minister Tony Blair said that
now that justice has been done, the British Government expects Libya
to pay compensation to the victims. The U.S. Deputy Attorney General
said that the investigations into the case are now set to continue to
find who was really behind the bombing. (MM) [Wed 31/1/01 - 21:04:20
CET]
"No
evidence that bomb in Lockerbie tragedy came from Malta" - defence
lawyer
A defence
lawyer in the Lockerbie Trial on Thursday attacked the prosecution's
case against two Libyans and insisted that there is no evidence that
the bomb that brought down Pan Am flight 103 in December 1988 was made
in Malta and then transferred to Frankfurt where it boarded the fatal
flight. Instead, it suggested that Palestinian extremists could have
staged the bombing that killed 270 people.
Reuters
reports that as the eight-month-old trial drew to an end, the defence
sought to convince judges that the prosecution case was too leaky to
prove Abdel Basset al-Megrahi and Al-Amin Khalifa Fahima had committed
mass murder and should be jailed for life.
Megrahi's
lawyer William Taylor said there was no proof his client was a member
of Libyan intelligence services at the time of the bombing. Instead
it was the Syrian-backed Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General
Command (PFLP-GC) and the lesser-known Palestinian Popular Struggle
Front that masterminded and executed the bombing.
Reuters
says that Taylor challenged the prosecution's key contention that a
suitcase containing an improvised bomb was placed on a Frankfurt-bound
plane at Malta's Luqa airport, insisted that the prosecution failed
to prove the bomb got on at Luqa airport.
The defence
need prove nothing; it need only sow "sufficient doubt" in
judges' minds. The onus is on the prosecution to prove beyond reasonable
doubt that the accused committed murder, which carries a mandatory life
sentence in the Scots law under which the pair is being tried. (MM)
[Thur 11/1/01 - 23:18:30 CET]
Key
witness finally appears in Lockerbie trial
A Palestinian
terrorist began his testimony Friday in the trial of two Libyans accused
of bombing Pan Am Flight 103, describing his role in attacks against
Israel in the 1970s. Mohammed Abu Talb, whose appearance at the special
Scottish court had been delayed for weeks, testified for the prosecution.
He was called in an effort to discredit the defendants' claim that the
group he led, the Palestine Popular Struggle Front, played a role in
the 1988 bombing over Lockerbie, Scotland. Abu Talb, has been jailed
in Sweden for attacks against Jewish and American targets in Europe.
He has denied any involvement in the Lockerbie bombing, which killed
270 people.
Evidence
presented at the trial, including passports and travel documents, showed
Talb had been in Malta in October 1988. But stamps on his Swedish travel
documents showed he had left Malta on Oct. 26 that year. Although he
had bought a return ticket, he claimed that was cheaper than a one-way
ticket and he had no intention of returning.
Defendants
Abdel Basset Ali al-Megrahi and Lamen Khalifa Fhimah blame Abu Talb
and other Palestinians for the 1988 attack. However prosecutors say
the two defendants, who are alleged to be Libyan secret agents, sent
a suitcase from the Mediterranean island of Malta carrying an explosives-laden
cassette recorder and routed it through Frankfurt, Germany, to the doomed
airliner in London. (MM) [Sat 11/11/00 - 15:16:33 CET]
Another
death in the Lockerbie Case: Prof. John Buontempo
Prof. John
Buontempo, former ambassador to Jordan, Syria and the Arab League, and
one of the protagonists of the Lockerbie case, passed away on Thursday
in Camp Zeist, The Netherlands, while attending the trial with his wife.
He was 69. He tried, single-handed and without official backing from
Malta, to bring the trial to be held in Malta. Although he did not succeed
in his mission, his efforts contributed to the commencement of the trial
in a Scottish court set-up in a former military base in the Netherlands.
He was a physician by profession. His body will be brought to Malta
for burial. (MM) [Fri 06/10/00 - 12:08:22 CET]
Maltese
airport official testifies in Lockerbie case
A
Maltese airport official admitted that airliners leaving Malta may have
routinely carried bags whose owners were unknown, reinforcing prosecutors'
contention that the suitcase bomb that blew up Pan Am Flight 103 came
from an Air Malta jet. The two Libyans charged with the murder of 259
people on board the Pan Am airliner and 11 people on the ground in Lockerbie,
Scotland, worked in the Libyan Arab Airlines offices in Malta. Prosecutors
claim that on the morning of the Dec. 21, 1988, explosion, the defendants
planted an unaccompanied suitcase with the bomb on Air Malta Flight
KM 180 to Frankfurt, Germany. They say the suitcase was transferred
there onto a feeder flight connecting with New York-bound Flight 103
at Heathrow airport in London. Wilfred Borg, general manager for ground
operations, appeared testy and defensive as the Scottish prosecutor
Alan Turnbull pressed him on baggage security procedures at Malta's
Luqa Airport . AirMalta had always denied that the suitcase with the
bomb left from Malta on board its flight to Frankfurt, were the suitcase
was eventually loaded on the Pan AM flight. (MM) [Sat 15/7/00 - 15:10:16
CET]
Lockerbie
trial adjourned for three weeks
The appearance
of a key witness in the Lockerbie trial has been delayed by a further
three weeks after judges suspended the trial on Thursday, ordering its
resumption on September 21st. Reuters reports that the adjournment,
to let U.S. intelligence services CIA dig up any further information
on the witness, was the latest delay in the 48-day-old trial of Libyans
Al-Amin Khalifa Fahima and Abdel Basset al-Megrahi at the former U.S.
airbase in the Netherlands.
The judges conceded that the final and most important witness so far,
Abdul Majid Giaka, could not testify until the U.S. Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) had confirmed that all relevant material about him in its
archives had been handed over. This includes cables of CIA agents in
Malta about Giaka's defection to the U.S. He is central to the prosecution
claim that the two accused posed as employees of Libyan Arab Airlines
(LAA) in Malta to place a suitcase containing a bomb hidden in a Toshiba
cassette recorder on an aircraft bound for Frankfurt. The prosecution
maintains the bomb was transferred onto a London-bound flight and then
onto Pan Am Flight 103 that blew up over the town of Lockerbie, Scotland
in December 1988, killing 270 people. Majid, who worked with the two
accused at LAA, is expected to provide vital testimony, directly linking
them (MM) [Fri 01/9/00 - 00:37:22 CET]
Witness
says Libyan suspect dealt with timer firm
The owner
of a firm that made the timing device said to have been used in the
Lockerbie bombing identified one of the Libyan accused as someone he
had done business with. Reuters and Associated Press report that Irwin
Meister, co-owner of Swiss company Mebo Ltd , told the murder trial
of Abdel Basset al-Megrahi and Al-Amin Khalifa Fahima that he recognized
al-Megrahi from business dealings that took place in Libya and Zurich
prior to the bombing. Pan Am flight 103 exploded as it flew over Lockerbie,
Scotland in December, 1988, killing all 259 people on board and 11 on
the ground. The Swiss said that he received an urgent order for 40 timers
just days before the 1988 explosion. Meanwhile, the CBS News program
60 Minutes isn't backing down from its story about a self-described
Iranian terrorist czar, even as the CIA and FBI reportedly brand him
a liar. The Iranian defector claimed that he had coordinated Iran's
overseas assassinations and terrorist operations. The man, who identified
himself as Ahmad Behbahani, said it was Iran that blew up Pam Am flight
103 over Lockerbie. But after interviews conducted by intelligence officials,
the CIA and FBI concluded the man lied and lacked basic knowledge of
Iran's intelligence apparatus. (MM) [Sat 17/6/00 - 16:46:42 CET]
Explosion
in cargo container brought down flight over Lockerbie
An explosion
tore through a cargo container aboard the Pan Am jumbo jet that disintegrated
over Scotland in 1988, an air accident investigator told the Lockerbie
trial Tuesday. Pieces of the container, with blue Pan Am insignia on
its mangled side panels, were exhibited in court. Reuters reports that
British accident investigator Peter Claydon testified that a ``high
energy'' blast occurred within the container, supporting prosecutors'
allegations that a bomb hidden in a suitcase brought down the plane
on December 21, 1988, killing all 259 people on board and 11 on the
ground in the Scottish town of Lockerbie. They accuse Libyans Abdel
Basset al-Megrahi and Al-Amin Khalifa Fahima of hiding an improvised
bomb in an unaccompanied brown Samsonite suitcase which originated in
Malta, where they were working for Libyan Arab Airlines. The floor of
container AVE 400 was cratered but not blackened, so the bomb was probably
in a suitcase sitting on top of another one, Claydon added. (MM) [Tue
30/5/00 - 23:08:48 CET]
Iran
could be behind Lockerbie disaster
A
TV program which aired on Sunday in the United States revealed details
about the alleged involvement of the Iranian government in the Lockerbie
disaster. The CBS current affairs program 60 minutes carried a report
about an Iranian intelligence service defector who says that the bombing
of a Pan Am aircraft over Scotland was devised by Iran to take revenge
on the United States after U.S. Navy vessel accidentally shot down an
Iranian Airbus in July 1988, killing 290. Prosecutors in the case being
heard in a Scottish court in the Netherlands claim that two Libyans
placed a bomb on an Air Malta flight to Frankfurt bomb that eventually
found its way onto the doomed Boeing 747. The defector, Ahmad Behbahani,
says he has documents in his possession that prove that his Islamic
fundamentalist country and not Libya was behind the bombing. (MM) [Mon
05/6/00 - 01:32:30 CET]
Lockerbie
bomb was allegedly wrapped in clothing bought from Maltese shop
The two
Libyans accused of the Lockerbie bombing that killed all 259 people
aboard the New York-bound plane and 11 residents of Lockerbie, Scotland,
in December 1988, allegedly stuffed the suitcase holding the bomb with
clothing bought from a shop in Sliema, Malta, called Mary's House. Reuters
reports that another witness in the Lockerbie case, a man who worked
for a clothes manufacturer in Malta, identified fabric scraps found
in the blast debris as coming from his factory and from a clothing distributor
who sold shirts similar to the fragments to Mary's House. Almost a month
has passed since the start of the trial of the two Libyans Abdel Basset
al-Megrahi and Al-Amin Khalifa Fahima accused of the bombing of the
Pan Am plane over the Scottish town of Lockerbie. The prosecution says
the pair were intelligence agents who posed as employees of Libyan Arab
Airlines and put a bomb in an unaccompanied suitcase in Malta that eventually
was loaded onto Flight 103 in London. The defense is expected to argue
that Palestinian extremists operating in Frankfurt were responsible
for putting the bomb on board. Malta has always denied the allegation
that the bomb was transported from Malta to Frankfurt on an AirMalta
flight. (MM) [Fri 03/6/00 - 23:30:30 CET]
Expert
explains Lockerbie report error
On
Thursday a British air accident investigator told the trial of two Libyans
accused of the Lockerbie bombing that there was a mathematical error
in the official report on the disaster. Christopher Protheroe said a
complex formula used to calculate blast wave effects after the explosion
had been incorrectly applied in the 1990 Air Accident Investigation
Branch (AAIB) report. This could mean that the bomb which destroyed
the Pan Am plane 12 years ago went off only 12 inches away from the
fuselage skin rather than the 25 inches which were originally calculated.
The prosecution alleges that Abdel Basset al-Megrahi and Al-Amin Khalifa
Fahima planted a bomb in a suitcase in Malta. However, Protheroe's witness
shows that the bomb might not have left Malta, as it is being alleged,
since the indications now show that the bomb exploded on the aeroplane
and not in a luggage container. As such this development continued to
cast a dark shadow on the two Libyans accused of the bombing. (MM) [Thur
25/5/00 - 22:31:08 CET]
Lockerbie
trial postponed again after technical glitches
Technical
glitches in the courtroom Tuesday forced the adjournment for 24 hours
of the trial of two Libyans accused of the 1988 Lockerbie aircraft bombing.
Reuters reports that the trial at a former U.S. airbase in the Netherlands
was to have resumed after a 12-day adjournment called by the prosecution.
Proceedings were scheduled to resume on early Tuesday morning but a
problem was discovered in the system used by court stenographers in
the courtroom. Chief prosecutor Colin Boyd adjourned the trial until
Wednesday morning. Libyans Abdel Basset al-Megrahi and Al-Amin Khalifa
Fahima have been on trial since May 3. (MM) [Tue 23/5/00 - 15:25:30
CET]
Lockerbie
trial adjourned until May 23
According
to Reuters services, the judges sitting on the Lockerbie trial agreed
to adjourn the examination until May 23 after prosecutors and defence
lawyers hammered out an agreement on certain evidence from the crash
of the Pan Am jumbo jet in 1988. It was the prosecutor Alastair Campbell
who requested the adjournment saying more time was needed to interview
expert defence witnesses. According to legal experts, this means that
the prosecutors could skip more than 100 witnesses, cutting up to seven
weeks of testimony dealing mostly with the debris that was scattered
over 845 square miles of southern Scotland and northern England by the
explosion. As a result, the trial, which was expected to run over a
year, could end after six months. Relatives of crash victims, who waited
more than a decade for the trial to begin on May 3, said they understood
the reasons for the adjournment. Many Maltese citizens were summoned
to testify in the case. (MM) [Fri 12/5/00 - 13:24:25 CET]
Lights
turned on Malta as the Lockerbie trial starts
Abdel
Basset al-Megrahi and Al-Amin Khalifa Fahima, the two Libyans who are
facing the trial for the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over the Scottish
town of Lockerbie in 1988 which left 270 people dead, said the Syrian-backed
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command (PFLP-GC)
and the Palestinian Popular Struggle Front (PPSF) were responsible.
The trial has just started in Camp Zeist in the Netherlands after years
of legal contrivances. The Maltese authorities in particular will be
interested in the outcome of the trial as the lights are turned onto
Malta and its airport. It is alleged that the plan which later led to
the crash was masterminded in the Malta, and that the bomb passed through
the local airport in Luqa and loaded on an Air Malta flight to Frankfurt
where the bomb was transferred later on the Pan Am flight. Two of the
best Maltese defence lawyers, Dr Giannella Caruana Curran and Dr Emmanuel
Mallia, are forming part of the defence team of the accused. Former
judge Godwin Muscat Azzopardi is defending the interests of Air Malta.
Malta has always denied these allegations. (MM) [Wed 03/5/00 - 22:42:32
CET]
Lockerbie
trial to start on May 3rd
The trial
of Abdel Basset al-Megrahi and Al-Amin Khalifa Fahima, the two Libyans
accused of the 1988 Lockerbie airliner bombing, will start as planned
next Wednesday after a Scottish judge on Thursday rejected prosecution
requests for a two-month delay. Prosecutors wanted the delay so as to
have time to assess many witnesses and other evidence, which the defence
revealed it, would use. At the pre-trial hearing at Camp Zeist, defence
lawyers for the two accused Libyans revealed plans to try to prove that
others were responsible for the bombing of a Boeing 747 over the Scottish
village of Lockerbie which killed 270 people. The two accused were in
court for the hearing. (MM) [Fri 28/4/00 - 00:57:47 CET]
No
TV of Lockerbie Trial
According
to Reuters services, a Scottish court on Tuesday rejected the British
Broadcasting Corporation's (BBC) bid to televise the trial of two Libyans
charged with bombing a Pan Am jumbo jet in 1988. "In my opinion the
petitioners have failed to demonstrate that televising the proceedings
would entail no risk to the administration of justice,'' Lord MacFadyen,
a Scottish High Court judge, said in a written ruling. MacFadyen later
rejected the BBC's request to appeal the decision to a three-judge panel.
The BBC Scotland has shown its disappointment and has already stated
that it will consult with lawyers about further steps. Abdel Basset
Ali al-Megrahi and Lamen Khalifa Fhimah pleaded innocent to charges
including murder and conspiracy to murder in the bombing of the airliner
over Lockerbie, Scotland, on December 21, 1988. The attack killed 259
passengers and crew -- including 189 Americans -- and 11 people on the
ground. Allegedly the bomb used in the operation passed through the
Maltese jurisdiction. Libya agreed to hand the two men over for trial
only after an agreement that the case would be heard in the Netherlands.
(MM) [Wed 08/3/00 - 15:45:05 CET]
Scottish
top prosecutor to meet relatives of Lockerbie bombing victims
Scotland's
top prosecutor will meet families of American victims of the Lockerbie
bombing on Saturday to assure them that his predecessor's resignation
will not affect the upcoming trial, officials said. Reuters reports
that Lord Advocate Colin Boyd has said the resignation of Lord Andrew
Hardie on February 16 would not hurt Britain's case against two Libyans
charged with the 1988 bombing of a Pan Am aircraft that killed 270 people
-- most of them Americans. Boyd was due to meet relatives in Boston
on Saturday, moving on to visit Washington families on Monday. He was
also expected to meet U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno to brief her
on the case. (MM) [Sat 04/3/00 - 19:07:49 CET]
Lockerbie
suspects enter no guilty pleas in pre-trial hearing
The two
Libyans accused of blowing up Pan Am flight 103 over the Scottish town
of Lockerbie in December 1988 killing 270 people - 259 on the plane
and 11 on the ground - pleaded not guilty at a pre-trial hearing in
the High Court in Edinburgh, Scotland. This left the way for a full
trial of the two suspects on May 3 in the Netherlands. (MM) [Thur 03/2/00
- 17:29:02 CET]
Malta
sent back to Britain parts for Scud Missiles destined for Libya
The
Maltese Foreign Ministry said on Tuesday that it intercepted a consignment
of Scud missile parts destined for Libya in April and sent them back
to Britain several months later. Reuters reports that a spokesman for
the Maltese Ministry confirmed to the news agency the reports which
said that consignment landed in Malta from London's Gatwick airport.
The cargo of 32 crates was inspected on the island after suspicions
it contained weapons equipment. They were subsequently confiscated and
returned to London, where they were discovered to be Scud parts. An
official for the British Foreign Office on Monday told Reuters that
suspicions were first roused in April 1999, but he said the issue was
not raised with Libyan officials during talks to end the 15-year diplomatic
break between the two countries because Britain "did not want to prejudice
the inquiry." Formal seizure of the shipment took place in November
1999, and the whole story was uncovered last Sunday on the Sunday Times
of London. Malta served as a main transit point for Libyan travellers
and cargo when Tripoli airport was closed during years of international
sanctions against Libya over the Lockerbie case. Export of missiles
to Libya is illegal under a European Union arms embargo and an international
treaty against the proliferation of ballistic missiles. Scuds are short-range,
road-mobile, ballistic missiles that can carry chemical, biological
or nuclear warheads in addition to traditional explosive payloads. This
is not the first time Malta is mentioned as a transit point for smuggling
of arms in Europe, North Africa and the Middle East. (MM) [Tue 11/1/00
- 21:52:47 CET]
Maltese-born
pathologist receives honours
Professor
Anthony Busuttil, a Maltese-born pathologist was awarded the Order of
the British Empire (OBE) at Buckingham Palace in London, England. Professor
Busuttil had earlier been awarded the National Order of Merit during
last December's Republic Day activities in Malta. Professor Busuttil
has worked on many cases including Lockerbie and the massacre at Dunblane
Scotland. The two Libyan suspects in Lockerbie bombing, which left 279
people dead, are currently undergoing a trail in Holland. (MM) [Mon
17/1/00 - 14:08:42 CET]
Lockerbie
prosecution dealt another blow
British
prosecutors in the case over the bombing of the Pan-Am Boeing 747 over
the Scottish town of Lockerbie in 1988, have suffered yet another setback
after a key witness apparently changed his side of the story. Reuters
cited the Scottish newspaper Scotland on Sunday which quoted sources
close to the case as saying that Abu Maged Jiacha, whose witness is
crucial for the prosecutors' theory, had changed parts of his story
when he was interviewed recently by defence attorneys. Jiacha is now
saying that he has seen one of the accused removing a suitcase from
a luggage carousel, not loading it on, at Luqa Airport in Malta. The
prosecution's charges so far stated that the bomb which downed the aircraft
was loaded on an Air Malta flight to Frankfurt by the two suspects,
Abdel Basset al-Megrahi and Al-Amin Khalifa Fahima. The bomb eventually
made it to the Pan-Am aircraft through London. The key witness's reconsideration
practically nullifies the prosecution's hypothesis. (MM) [Sun 23/1/00
- 22:18:50 CET]
First
public appearance for the Libyans accused in Lockerbie case
On Tuesday,
Abdel Basset al-Megrahi and Al-Amin Khalifa Fahima, made their first
public appearance in the Lockerbie case. The two are accused of masterminding
the explosion on board Pan Am Flight 103 over the Scottish village of
Lockerbie on December 21sy, 1988. All 289 people aboard, mostly Americans,
were killed along with 11 people on the ground. The bomb that caused
the explosion was allegedly manufactured in Malta and transferred on
the Pan Am flight in Frankfurt airport in Germany. The lawyers for the
Libyans accused of the bombing asked the special Scottish court hearing
the case in the Netherlands to delete an indictment for conspiracy to
murder and omit references to Libya's intelligence service. Several
localities in Malta, related to the movements of the Libyans before
the bombing, were mentioned in the indictment. (MM)[Tue 07/12/99 - 23:15:20
CET]
Lockerbie
trial start postponed
The start
of the trial in the case of the Lockerbie bombing has been postponed
for three months, as requested by the defence, and a hearing has now
been set for May 3rd 2000. However, Scottish judge Ranald Sutherland
dismissed a defence motion calling for the dismissal of the conspiracy
charge against the two Libyans accused of masterminding and executing
the Lockerbie bombing. The judge said that he was satisfied that on
the basis of what is set out in charge one (the conspiracy charge) the
Scottish courts do have jurisdiction. The defence counsel of Abdel Basset
al-Megrahi and Al-Amin Khalifa Fahima had argued the charge should not
be brought. (MM)[Thur 09/12/99 - 13:10:03 CET]
Malta
mentioned in Lockerbie bombing indictment
Malta was
mentioned extensively in the indictment against the two Libyans accused
of the bombing of a Pan Am Boeing 747 over the Scottish town of Lockerbie
in 1988, killing 270 passengers. The two Libyans were accused of placing
a suitcase containing explosives on a flight departing Malta, which
were then transferred on the Pan Am flight. Several localities in Malta,
related to the movements of the Libyans before the bombing, were mentioned
in the indictment. (MM)[Sun 31/10/99 - 17:31:46 CET]