You know what? I've tried to keep an open mind on this. I've tried to consider the possibility that Megrahi might have been involved somehow, even though the evidence shouldn't have come remotely close to convicting him. I've borne in mind that he was a Libyan security officer in the 1980s, which doesn't entirely imply compete sweetness and light. But it doesn't wash.
If he didn't buy the clothes, which he didn't, there isn't the
slightest shred of evidence he had any hand in it at all. The authorities have taken what was probably a decoy clothes purchase in Malta, deliberately intended to track the investigation far away from the real point of introduction of the bomb if it were discovered, plus a coincidental coding anomaly at Frankfurt airport (which was admitted to suffer coding anomalies from time to time), seen Megrahi passing through the airport at the important time, and made 2+2=56.
They shamelessly blackmailed Abdulmajid Giaka with threats of cutting off his retainer and sending him back to Libya if he didn't come up with something to support this idea, and then took the resulting fairy-story to court knowing that Giaka was making it up. The pressed and hinted and bribed Tony Gauci until he hesitatingly agreed that Megrahi "resembled" the clothes purchaser, even though his original description had been of a man nothing like Megrahi in most respects. They tortured the evidence regarding the day of the purchase to try to support the only day Megrahi was on the island and able to visit the shop, even though any reasonable evaluation of the same evidence pointed firmly to an entirely different day and actually
excluded the day they were trying to support.
The possibility that the authorities had some killer behind-the-scenes information they couldn't bring to court which made them sure of his guilt just doesn't wash either. What he is said to have done, and the plot that was said to have been carried out, are completely bonkers. There are about ten ways it could easily have gone wrong so that the plane wasn't brought down. There were about five ways the plot could have been exposed even if it was. This clearly wasn't a one-man job, but in over 20 years, nobody has found any other evidence of this operation or any other conspirators.
Maybe Megrahi isn't a nice man. I don't know. Maybe he even did stuff in the 1980s we wouldn't be comfortable with. Again I don't know. This is no justification for railroading a conviction for 270 murders against him in a show trial. The way these US senators are carrying on, when it was the US authorities who started this travesty of justice in the first place, makes me want to vomit.
I just sent this to the
Herald, though of course they might not print it.
Has it occurred to the US senators and others who maintain that Abdelbaset al-Megrahi should have remained in prison, that if that had happened, his appeal would not have been withdrawn and would have been decided by now? Any rational examination of the SCCRC findings and the evidence as a whole must concede the overwhelming probability it would have been successful, and Mr. al-Megrahi would now be home by right as a free man. Mr. MacAskill may be prevented from "looking behind the appeal", but the rest of us are under no such constraints, and the conclusion is not difficult to reach.
The notes of Mr. MacAskill’s meeting with Mr. al-Megrahi are now public, and reveal an unpleasant picture of a sick and desperate man being treated like a mushroom (kept in the dark and fed manure) in an attempt to pressurise him into dropping his appeal. The hand-written letter from Mr. al-Megrahi is really quite distressing, when read in the light of the SCCRC report and the striking weakness of the case against him in general. This is not someone who should have escaped on a technicality; this is an innocent man sitting in jail looking at a medical death sentence.
Our criminal justice system and we as a nation are guilty of a far worse crime than taking international relations and trade deals into account when releasing a foreign prisoner. We have convicted a man on evidence that wouldn’t support the issuing of a parking ticket, imprisoned him 1,800 miles from home and family, and turned him into an international hate figure while he is in the terminal stages of aggressive prostate cancer.
If any "wide-ranging inquiry" is appropriate, surely this is the matter that should concern us, rather than silly conspiracy theories linking Mr. al-Megrahi’s release to the Gulf oil spill.
Rolfe the completely disgusted.