Q+A - Abdel Basset al-Megrahi and the Lockerbie bombing
LONDON (Reuters) - Abdel Basset al-Megrahi, the former Libyan intelligence agent convicted of the 1988 Lockerbie bombing, could be released from prison on compassionate grounds and returned to Libya, Scottish officials have indicated.
Following are some questions and answers about the Megrahi case, the debate that surrounds his 2001 conviction and subsequent appeals, and the implications his release could have for British-Libyan relations.
WHAT EXACTLY WAS MEGRAHI CONVICTED OF?
After a trial held in the Netherlands under Scottish law, Megrahi was found to have played a "prominent part in planning and in perpetrating" the bombing of Pan Am flight 103 from London to New York over Lockerbie, Scotland on Dec. 21, 1988. He was convicted of the murder of 270 people; the 259 people on board the jet, mostly Americans, and 11 people on the ground who were killed by falling debris. The guilty verdict was the unanimous decision of three Scottish judges. He was sentenced to life in prison, with a minimum jail term of 27 years.
WHAT DOES MEGRAHI SAY AND WHAT STATE IS HE IN?
Lawyers for the Libyan say he was a senior airline executive in Libya and had nothing to do with the bombing. They say the evidence presented in court, which largely depended on the testimony of a shopkeeper in Malta, was inconclusive. Megrahi maintains his innocence. An appeal made in 2002 was unanimously rejected by a court of five judges. However, the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission agreed to reconsider the case and in June 2007 said that Megrahi could make a further appeal against his conviction. That appeal is ongoing in a Scottish court. Megrahi meanwhile remains jailed at Greenock prison in western Scotland where he is visited by his wife and family. Last year, doctors diagnosed him with advanced prostate cancer which his lawyer says is incurable. He is receiving treatment at a hospital in Scotland, but his lawyer says he could die at any time. While he wants to return home, Megrahi also wants his appeal to go ahead in the hope his conviction will be quashed.
WHAT HAS LIBYA BEEN DOING ABOUT IT? Continued...
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