The problem is the belief that it is a right to be "compassionately released". It isn't a right (morally, in any case, I'm not sure about the law). It is an act of mercy or compassion -- and for one to be worthy of it, one must be deserving of such mercy.
But, yes, I agree: if we deny this guy release, next time someone who merely killed 200, or even 100, innocent people would be denied release, as well! And we wouldn't want that sort of barbaric, mideaval cruelty in our legal system, now would we?
What's even more annoying than the "compassionate" release itself is the attempt to claim that "compassionately" releasing a mass murderer of 270 people is some sort of higher morality.
This is the king's new morality: only smart men can see it.
Well, you know, we
don't want that sort of barbaric, mediaeval cruelty in our system.
We don't want our prisons turned into hospices for elderly, dying, demented, cancer-ridden, paralysed criminals. And that's the road we'd be going down if we were to allow consideration of the severity of the offence to influence the decision to grant compassionate release.
If you look at the criticism of this case in Scotland, it's entirely based on whether or not the assessment was correct that Megrahi was sick enough at the time to qualify - not whether the principle was wrong. Actually, the three-months-to-live thing isn't set in stone, because the law recognises that no doctor can give a prognosis to that degree of accuracy. Three months is a rule-of-thumb guideline. The evidence at the time would have been quite sufficient for any "ordinary" prisoner, however this case has become a great political stick for the opposition to beat the government with. That's why we're seeing the press articles railing against Megrahi's continuing survival, and not against Biggs who is in the same situation.
I don't know where you get any assessment of "deserving" mercy when it comes to this sort of situation, unless you're again simply talking about the severity of the offence. What about Biggs? Lower body count, but still a notorious criminal (and one proved beyond any reasonable doubt to have been guilty, with no outstanding appeal). He deliberately gamed the system, escaping to live in luxury abroad for many years, only returning to England voluntarily when he was old and sick and knew he'd be eligible for compassionate release quite soon for that reason. He's still alive, and it's getting on for seven months since he was released.
Set against the 270 fatalities at Lockerbie, there are a number of reasons not to deny Megrahi compassionate release.
- His outstanding appeal was held to have a good prospect of success - i.e. he may well be innocent
- He's Libyan, so holding him in prison in Scotland is a more severe punishment than for someone imprisoned close to home and family, and in his own culture
- His disease is extremely painful, necessitating hospice-like treatment including the use of strong painkillers - that's heroin (diamorphine) by the way, and we've got more heroin in our prisons than we want already
- There is no prospect of his re-offending
- And finally, keeping him in jail till he dies would have seriously damaged Britain's interests in the Middle East
You may not like that last bit, but it's part of the mix. The Middle East is a big enough problem as it is, without doing something that will piss off Gadaffi
for no particularly good reason. Wake up and smell the coffee.
Rolfe.