Jaggy Bunnet
Philosopher
- Joined
- May 16, 2003
- Messages
- 6,241
I expect you have got a poll to back that statement up?
If one is produced will you address it or will you ignore it?
I expect you have got a poll to back that statement up?
"I'm very, very pleased that Mr Megrahi has gone home,'' he said. "From the very beginning, following the investigation very closely, the whole thrust of it was towards Iran. Then suddenly that shifted and it switched to Libya. We were being told at the time by the American and British authorities that if we get the Libyans, it will lead to all the others.
"I was suspicious about this sudden switch anyway. As we can see, time has shown that it has certainly not led to the conviction of other people. I feel an innocent man was convicted."
You know there was an outstanding appeal against the conviction.
This seems like an elaborate puppet show. The more I hear about all the back dealings the worse it sounds for all parties involved. Of course in the end all the governments seem to benefit from the outcome. That doesn't mean the people have to like it. Maybe the public in the UK like it but from what I have seen in the US people think this is rotten. I don't think I've seen anyone try to spin this story in a positive way and like I said before Wolf Blitzer questioned MacAskill harder than I've ever seen him question anyone before.
Is this the guy who is under the impression - after spending "a large amount of time on the case" - that Megrahi was convicted by a jury?
You know there was an outstanding appeal against the conviction. The main reason for the appeal going ahead is that the most solid plank of evidence presented against Megrahi was from a Maltese shopkeeper. This man, described as "an apple short of a picnic" stood up and swore in court that the man who had bought the clothes found in the suitcase bomb was not over six feet tall and in his fifties, as he previously said, but was Megrahi - 5' 8" tall and 36 years old. And yes, the day he bought them was 7th December. The only day Megrahi could possibly have been in that shop.
Load of bollocks. Show me one country which excludes some type of criminals from "compassionate release" or "pardon" regulations.Then the law is clearly wrong in this case.
It was agreed between all parties involved - UK, US, Libya - that Megrahi would be tried according to Scottish law and serve his sentence in Scotland. If you're going to whine about all the poor victims - they were from a dozen or so countries, should they all be consulted in such a case? The US was involved because the plane was American.This case isnt about some domestic Scottish mass murderer.
The Scottish people can vote for a government to enact as many compassionate laws as they wish regarding that.
This case concerns a convicted international terrorist and mass murderer who killed a large number of non Scots, and the bomb just happened to go off over Scotland.
Had it exploded an hour later we wouldnt be having this discussion.
You find it surprising that the family members in the US would react like this?
(**) in the British situation with devolution for some regions, the British government doubles as the government of England.
Load of bollocks. Show me one country which excludes some type of criminals from "compassionate release" or "pardon" regulations.
It was agreed between all parties involved - UK, US, Libya - that Megrahi would be tried according to Scottish law and serve his sentence in Scotland. If you're going to whine about all the poor victims - they were from a dozen or so countries, should they all be consulted in such a case? The US was involved because the plane was American.
But that's all water under the bridge. From the moment Megrahi entered Camp Zeist (*), he was on Scottish soil, under Scottish jurisdiction, and it's up to the Scottish government and judiciary to judge over things like compassionate release.
I get the definite impression that your posts are only thinly disguised rants against Scottish devolution and possible Scottish independence. If you have a gripe with that, start another thread about it and leave the bickering here. However, I've seen no single indication from your posts, as far as I've read them, that an English government (**) had acted different, on the contrary, they were all too happy to transfer him earlier, in 2007, something which was expressly forbidden by the rules set up in 2001.
(*) Camp Zeist was, for the duration of the trial, under the jurisdiction of the court.
(**) in the British situation with devolution for some regions, the British government doubles as the government of England.
Now, if the corroboration vanishes because, say, it turns out that the only witness is a couple of apples short of a picnic then it's pretty much a free pass to an appeal. And perhaps this is where the problem comes in.
It may very well be that the Justice Minister (ours, not the English one) knows exactly how shoogily a peg the conviction is and took the less bad option (compassion/accusations of bad decisions as against evidence that Scots Law screwed up one of it's most important trials, possibly with American buggeration thrown in to boot).
This is, I suspect, exactly the kind of think that motivates Jim Swires based on his writings in the press.
[....] and like I said before Wolf Blitzer questioned MacAskill harder than I've ever seen him question anyone before.
Do you judge whether someone did the right thing by how hard an interviewer leans on him? Does the fact that Wolf Blitzer was angry mean anything at all? We're seeing a lot of angry Americans, and most of them seem to be pretty hazy about what's actually going on.
How MacAskill handled the questions might be more informative.
Rolfe.
I get the definite impression that your posts are only thinly disguised rants against Scottish devolution and possible Scottish independence. If you have a gripe with that, start another thread about it and leave the bickering here.
No, that has already been resolved in a parliamentary debate ("West Lothian Question").You could get a thread out of that on it's own!ddt said:in the British situation with devolution for some regions, the British government doubles as the government of England.![]()
It's interesting in that it mentions the doubts cast over his conviction and his appeal. However, this seems wrong:Back on topic, however, I was looking at the extent to which the run-up to the release had been reported in the US media and came across this, which I think you might find interesting:
http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/europe/08/13/lockerbie.bombing.release/index.html
His appeal was already being heard by the Appeal Court (though at glacial speed).Megrahi has lodged an appeal of his conviction, which a five-judge review commission is still considering.
Spot the errors.I was the State Department Officer in Charge of Crisis Management during the Lockerbie incident. this means I was montioring in real time what was happening. It took months to determine who was behind the explosion of PanAm 104.
I think Köchler used stronger words than your over-civil British understatement.Incidentally, that took me to this blog which in turn reminded me that the UN observer was less than taken with the trial:
http://underachievement.blogspot.com/2009/08/why-is-there-such-uncritical-acceptance.html
and further down:A CIA terror expert who worked on the Lockerbie investigation has claimed Megrahi would have been freed on appeal.
In an exclusive interview, retired case officer Robert Baer has revealed details of the secret dossier of evidence Megrahi hoped would clear his name.
Or should this be discussed over in the CT thread?"There is hard evidence of other nations - Iran particularly - being responsible for this atrocity.
"The CIA knew this almost from the moment the plane exploded. This decision to free Megrahi was about protecting the integrity of your justiciary because the appeal papers prove Iran was involved.
Ah...so this is the irrefutable evidence he was talking about. A book. Shocking.
(*) where does the apostrophe-s go with these titles behind the name?