As far as this subject goes, I am disturbed to hear the case isn't as solid as one is lead to believe.
You're a bit slow on the uptake, aren't you? From the start of this discussion, even before Megrahi was released, sundry posters have been pointing out that he probably didn't do it. The main thrust of the argument as I recall it was mindless baying for him to die in prison, preferably in as much pain as possible, and please don't confuse the issue by pointing out that he's probably innocent.
The relevant court judgements are available online, and I'd seriously like to hear from anyone who has read these documents and who still believes this case was proved beyond reasonable doubt - or even on the balance of probabilities. In fact the case is as full of holes as a Swiss cheese (called Edwin Bollier).
http://www.scotcourts.gov.uk/library/lockerbie/docs/lockerbiejudgement.pdf
http://www.scotcourts.gov.uk/library/lockerbie/docs/lockerbieappealjudgement.pdf
There was a second appeal ongoing at the time of the release, and this was pretty certain to have resulted in the conviction being quashed. The evidence of the US authorities having bribed a key witness was damning. (Of course that wasn't the only witness they bribed, but the bribery of the first witness was uncovered during the original trial - why the trial continued after that revelation, nobody really knows.)
If you search online for advocates promoting the view that this case was a serious miscarriage of justice, you'll find people like
Hans Kochler (official UN observer to the trial),
Robert Black (emeritus professor of law who was instrumental in arranging the trial),
Jim Swire (father of one of the passengers on the plane) and even
Robert Baer (CIA official who worked on the case). If on the other hand you look for people asserting Megrahi's guilt, you'll find only one Frank Duggan, spokesman for the US families of Pan Am 103 (not himself a relative, but a US government appointee, who never presents a case but merely jumps into discussions asserting that "the evidence was overwhelming"), Richard Marquise (FBI official who worked on the case, who again never presents a case but simply asserts guilt in occasional blog comments posts), and assorted twoofer web sites who seem to be basing their assessment on - wait for it - David Shayler.
I find it odd that following on from the
Sunday Post article Architect noted, saying that Megrahi is essentially on his deathbed, we have pretty much simultaneously reports like this one.
http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/home-news/swire-defends-megrahi-doctors-1.1039211
[....] leading oncologist Karol Sikora, who advised Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill, admitted he was embarrassed that al Megrahi had outlived his three-month prognosis after he had assessed him. [....]
Sikora, Dean of the School of Medicine at Buckingham University, had advised authorities to put a three-month estimate on al Megrahi’s life. However, yesterday he said his lifespan could be far longer than originally predicted.
He said: “There was always a chance he could live for 10 years, 20 years … But it’s very unusual.”
Seems to me Sikora aquiesced to the Libyan government's desire for support for the compassionate release, and now he's embarrassed, and pretty much saying who knows how long such a patient could live - in rare cases it has been a very long time.
Whether the
Sunday Post's article is based on actually knowing about the man's clinical condition, or more speculation - well, who knows?
Rolfe.