26.08.10 Libya Focus
Debate over Lockerbie bomber release continues unabated

The prolonged flow of criticism of the Scottish and, by extension, the British
government, over the release of Lockerbie bomber Abdel Basset al-Meghrahi continues unabated in the US. The cacophony is now spreading to London, where
the right-wing press is clamouring for greater UK frankness in dealing with
those
members of the US Senate, principally by making available more official
documents in the case relating to diagnoses of the state of al-Meghrahi's life
expectancy in the period immediately prior to his release.
A second line of US interest is the BP connection to the release and repatriation of al-Meghrahi to Libya in 2009,
when, it is alleged, the oil company used lobbying at the highest level. In
effect,
there have been recurrent claims that British policy was driven by commercial
motives before all others.
The forthcoming mid-term elections in the US considerably enhance the response
by the US to these twin difficulties with the UK: Lockerbie and BP.
Attempts by many candidates to seize the moral high ground in the energy sector,
and in demonstration of high nationalist sentiments pitched against foreign
interest, become keen areas of concern, especially when wedded to the problems
faced
by BP in the Gulf of Mexico in recent months.
President Barack Obama called for Libya not to make the anniversary of al-Meghrahi's release a public
spectacle; a request also delivered by the British government. Libyan
consideration on the matter was limited, but adequate to meet these
requirements.
In a remarkable sign of frustration, al-Meghrahi claimed that his imprisonment
in the UK had been a torment equal to a death by deprivation lasting through a
thousand days of pain while incarcerated. He was critical of the British for
keeping him in a prison as an inmate without special needs for his medical
problems,
although it is to be noted that he has kept in touch with fellow prisoners
during the last year. The unofficial Libyan view is that the diplomatic
initiatives
taken in America can be ignored.
Certainly, there is little possibility that the Libyans will agree to return
al-Meghrahi to the custody of the Scottish authorities as requested by
important
American politicians, including Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
For the Libyans, the case is closed and the low media treatment inside the
country of the first anniversary of his release indicates that this is so. The
Libyan
authorities, however, have problems of their own with al-Meghrahi. He has,
after
all, unique knowledge of at least some part of the plot to down the airliner in
1988, but of which he has so far not revealed any details. It is to be supposed
that the Libyan government would prefer this situation not to be changed. Much
speculation by relatives of victims of the bombing as to the comparative role
of
al-Meghrahi tends to indicate their belief that more powerful individuals and
institutions from Syria, Iran and the Palestinian organisations were involved.
In private, senior Libyans, who have been involved in foreign affairs and other
external relations, are quite blunt in indicating that the pro-Israeli lobbies
in Washington appear to be in support of the campaign for the re-imprisonment
of
al-Meghrahi. However, given the media attention generated over the al-Meghrahi
issue in the US, it must be expected that the case will continue to cause
irritation there for some time.
Four US members of Congress, Robert Menendez, Frank R Lautenberg, Charles Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand sent a letter on 20th August to the Emir of Qatar Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani (one time head of the Arab League), the First Minister of Scotland Alex Salmond and to Colonel Qadhafi. They communicated their concerns that the release of al-Meghrahi might be
construed as politically improper and legally questionable.
The four did not take account of the circumstances at the time which were the
end of the long engagement with weapons of mass destruction (WMD) by Colonel
Qadhafi, and other concessions made by Libya as a means of ending US and UN sanctions. It is assumed by Libyan opposition spokesmen that the al-Meghrahi
issue was, from the mid 1980s, an integral part of the settlement deal with
Libya's return to the international community. Dr Ghanem has hinted strongly that the current US awakening of interest in the release of
al-Meghrahi takes no account of the realities of the broader deal thrashed out
by Libya at an earlier period.
In the meantime, congressional pressure being put on the UK and in particular,
the Scottish government, is designed to exploit natural sentiment against an
individual found guilty of mass murder of their fellow citizens. The British,
for
their part, have responded coldly to the US demands and are unlikely to do
other
than release documents pertinent to the case.
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