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Showing posts with label Lockerbie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lockerbie. Show all posts
megrahiPM_r_k[i-megrahiPM_r_k]With the indignation of the Tories over the release of Abdelbaset Ali Mohamed Megrahi last month fresh in the memory, events are turning in a way that may give them cause to regret they went so far out on a limb.
The first of these events is a story in The Guardian and The Times which report that Megrahi has published the papers he believes would have secured his release on appeal. Helpfully linked, this is a 300-page dossier which, the paper says, "challenges key planks of the prosecution case".
One recalls at the time of Megrahi's release, Tim Montgomerie of Conservative Home, storming with indignation, posting this quote on his site:
It seems to me an utter perversion of the meaning of compassion, both in law and morality, to suggest that an unrepentant, mass murderer of entirely innocent human beings should not be required to end his life in prison.That was followed in short order by a piece from David Lidington MP, shadow foreign affairs minister, under the heading: "Megrahi: The British people deserve to be told the truth."
Shortly afterwards, David Cameron had dived in, feet first, demanding an independent inquiry into the release of Megrahi, accusing Brown of double dealing.
That perhaps should have been lodged in the category "be careful what you wish for", because Megrahi's dossier is but the first instalment in a rush of documents which are going to re-open old wounds, going back to the Thatcher era and into the Major years, proving – as The New Statesman has recently averred - that Megrahi was framed.
This is by no means the first time such a charge has been laid, the bulk of the work having been carried out by the late Paul Foot in 1995, a summary of which he published in The Guardian in 2004, only a few months before he died.
One of the central characters in this dark and murky tale was Montgomerie's heroine, Margaret Thatcher. She initiated a series of actions which, in the most level of terms, can only be described as a perversion of the course of justice – one that ensured that the guilty parties escaped while a man innocent of that particular crime ended up in a Scottish prison.
It should be recalled that, in order to secure his release, Megrahi was pressured into abandoning his appeal. But it is also important to recall that the case had been referred to the appeal court in 2007 by the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission. Its chairman, Graham Forbes, then observed: "... based upon our lengthy investigations, the new evidence we have found and other evidence which was not before the trial court, that the applicant may have suffered a miscarriage of justice."
To have gained the support of the Commission, Megrahi's lawyers would have had to have presented some powerful evidence and it is some of that same evidence that has just now been published.
Combined with Foot's earlier, impeccable work, this takes the case way beyond "conspiracy theory" territory and lodges it firmly as an example of the utter degradation of the Scottish judiciary, and of the lengths to which the political establishments in Scotland and England will go to protect their own.
It requires no great leap of faith to believe that the real reason why Megrahi was released was precisely to prevent the appeal going ahead, when much of the evidence which has been so assiduously suppressed for the better part of two decades would have emerged in open court. With the prospect of Megrahi then being found innocent, the establishment went into overdrive in an attempt to ensure that the appeal was closed down.
Thus, when the Tories decided to extract what short-term political advantage they could gain out of Megrahi's release, they perhaps forgot something. Even if inadvertently, Brown, in seeking to keep embarrassing details out of the public domain - which would, of course, have reflected badly on himself and Tony Blair – was also protecting the reputations of both Thatcher and Major.
Having made such a fuss, however, the Tories have contributed to raising the profile of the issue to its current elevated state, negating the attempts to keep the it low-key. The affair now has the potential to wreck many reputations, and rightly so. Political perversion of the justice system, for whatever reasons – and there were many – is always unacceptable.
Now, some very plump chickens, it seems, are about to come storming home to roost. The Tories should have kept quiet.
COMMENT THREAD
Megrahi[i-Megrahi]A strong feeling of the need to apologise for the obsession with Afghanistan on this blog is somewhat tempered by the realisation that, this week, we have had near-record hits, albeit that an increasing number are directed at Defence of the Realm.
Fortunately for the government, the Lockerbie affair has dominated the front pages this week, with the repatriation of Abdelbaset Ali Mohamed Megrahi and the faux indignation directed at the Scottish Executive for releasing a "mass murderer" to die (or not) with his family.
Since a huge number of people are convinced of Megrahi's innocence, including many of the relatives of the victims of the bombing, this affair has all the hallmarks of one of those grand political stitch-ups where no one in the corridors of power is particularly keen that the truth – much less the whole truth – should be known. We are but pawns in a bigger game.
Nevertheless the affair has had the merit of squeezing the train-wreck of the Afghan election out of the headlines, limiting analysis of what is turning out to be another of those grand political stitch-ups, as the Western powers manoeuvre themselves into a position where they can extricate themselves from an unwelcome commitment, without making it too obvious that they have been roundly defeated.
The additional merit of the affair is that, at a the tail end of the "silly season", it is keeping the political classes and their claque occupied and diverted. One notes that Cameron is demanding a statement from Brown on the release of Megrahi, but is seemingly uninterested in the fate of the peoples of Afghanistan and their "stolen election" - peoples who, like our troops, are mere cannon fodder in the greater game.
The strands here are beginning to come together, and one really must admire the way the governments of the coalition nations are keeping in the dark their own public – and the Afghan people – while the deals are stitched-up behind closed doors, preparatory to handing over the nation to a re-invented Taleban and declaring yet another grand victory for democracy in the style of Iraq.
It is going to take a few more posts to work this through, so we'll continue with the reporting and analysis, as we gradually put the pieces together.
COMMENT THREAD