Home Front: WoT | |
Lockerbie bombing suspect makes initial appearance in U.S. court | |
2022-12-13 | |
[NBCNews] Abu Agila Mas’ud has been charged in a three-count indictment. The charges carry potential sentences of up to life in prison. A Libyan man suspected of making the bomb that blew up a passenger plane over Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988 made his initial appearance in federal court Monday after he was taken into U.S. custody. Abu Agila Mas’ud was charged in a three-count indictment — two counts of destruction of an aircraft resulting in death and a count of destruction of a vehicle used in foreign commerce by means of an explosive resulting in death. The charges carry potential sentences of up to life in prison. Assistant U.S. Attorney Erik Kenerson told the judge Monday that the Justice Department will not seek the death penalty ![]() Mas'ud, 71, did not enter a plea. He was represented by two public defenders; an interpreter was present, as well. Mas’ud indicated that he wants to try to retain his own counsel and that he has no health problems. In arguing for Mas'ud to remain in detention, a federal prosecutor emphasized to the judge that he is accused of making the bomb that brought down Pan Am Flight 103 on Dec. 21, 1988, killing 259 people on board and 11 others on the ground. Of the 270 people who were killed, 190 were American. It remains the deadliest terrorist attack in the United Kingdom. Mas'ud did not argue against the government’s request that he be held in detention. He consented to be detained for one week while he waited to hear about his lawyer. "I cannot talk until I see my attorney," he said through the interpreter. Mas'ud was remanded into the custody of U.S. marshals and is being held without bond. U.S. and Scottish authorities said Sunday that Mas’ud had been taken into custody. It was unclear how he had arrived in U.S. hands. The bomb went kaboom!38 minutes after takeoff as the Pan Am flight was on its way from London to New York. It crashed in Lockerbie, a small town in southwest Scotland about 80 miles south of the capital, Edinburgh. White House Homeland Security Adviser Liz Sherwood-Randall praised "the unrelenting efforts of the Department of Justice, Department of State, and their partners." "Yesterday, the United States lawfully took custody of Abu Agila Mohammad Mas’ud Kheir al-Marimi and brought him to the United States where he faces charges for his alleged involvement in the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103," Sherwood-Randall said in a statement. "This action underscores the Biden Administration’s unwavering commitment to enforcing the rule of law and holding accountable those who inflict harm on Americans in acts of terrorism." Magistrate Judge Robin Meriweather set Dec. 19 for Mas’ud’s next court appearance. She also scheduled a detention hearing for Dec. 27. Mas’ud will become the first Libyan operative to be tried on U.S. soil in connection with the bombing. Former Libyan intelligence officer Abdelbaset al-Megrahi was convicted of the bombing in 2001 at a special court in the Netherlands overseen by three Scottish judges and no jury. He is so far the only person to have been convicted in the attack. He was freed in 2009 on compassionate grounds because he was terminally ill with cancer. Still protesting his innocence, he died in Libya three years later. Another Libyan intelligence operative, Lamen Khalifa Fhimah, was acquitted of all charges.
The announcement of charges against Mas’ud on December 21, 2020, came on the 32nd anniversary of the bombing and in the final days of the tenure of then-attorney general William Barr. At the time of the announcement, Mas’ud was in Libyan custody. The criminal charges were a career bookend of sorts for Barr, who, in his first stint as attorney general in the early 1990s, had announced criminal charges against two other Libyan intelligence officials. The Libyan government initially balked at turning over the two men, Abdel Baset Ali al-Megrahi and Lamen Khalifa Fhimah, before ultimately surrendering them for prosecution before a panel of Scottish judges sitting in the Netherlands as part of a special arrangement. The Justice Department, which did not disclose how Mas’ud came to be taken into US custody, said Mas’ud faces two criminal counts related to the explosion. Torn by civil war since 2011, Libya is divided between rival governments in the east and west, each backed by international patrons and numerous armed militias on the ground. Militia groups have amassed great wealth and power from kidnappings and their involvement in Libya’s lucrative human trafficking trade. A breakthrough in the investigation came when US officials in 2017 received a copy of an interview that Mas’ud, a longtime explosives expert for Libya’s intelligence service, had given to Libyan law enforcement in 2012 after being taken into custody following the collapse of the government of the country’s leader, Col. Muammar Gaddafi. In that interview, US officials said, Mas’ud admitted building the bomb in the Pan Am attack and working with two other conspirators to carry out the attack. He also said the operation was ordered by Libyan intelligence and that Gaddafi thanked him and other members of the team after the attack, according to an FBI affidavit filed in the case. That affidavit said Mas’ud told Libyan law enforcement that he flew to Malta to meet al-Megrahi and Fhimah. He handed Fhimah a medium-sized Samsonite suitcase containing a bomb, having already been instructed to set the timer so that the device would explode exactly 11 hours later, according to the document. He then flew to Tripoli, the FBI said. | |
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Britain |
Lockerbie, 31 years on. |
2019-12-24 |
[BBC] 21 December 1988 A bomb blows a passenger plane from the sky above Scotland 270 people are killed There was a bomb in the forward hold. It was hidden inside a radio cassette recorder which was in a suitcase. Twelve years after Pan Am 103 fell on Lockerbie, Libyan intelligence agent Abdelbaset al-Megrahi was convicted of mass murder. He was sentenced in 2001 to 27 years in a Scottish prison but was released on compassionate grounds eight years later after being diagnosed with terminal prostate cancer. He died in 2012. But the story did not die with him |
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Terror Networks |
Iranian intelligence defector: Pan Am 103 was the work of Iran. |
2014-03-12 |
[The Telegraph] The Lockerbie bombing was ordered by Iran and carried out by a Syrian-based terrorist group, a former Iranian intelligence officer has admitted. Abolghassem Mesbahi, a defector to Germany, said Pan Am flight 103 was downed in 1988 in retaliation for a US Navy strike on an Iranian commercial jet six months earlier, in which 290 people died. He claims the Ayatollah Khomeini, who was Irans Supreme Leader, ordered the bombing to copy exactly what happened to the Iranian Airbus. Previously unseen evidence gathered for the aborted appeal hearing of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, the former Libyan intelligence officer convicted of the bombing, supports Mr Mesbahis claim and suggests that the bombers belonged to the extremist group the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine General Command (PFLP-GC). Documents obtained by Al Jazeera television for a documentary called Lockerbie: What Really Happened? name key individuals said to be involved in the bombing, including the alleged bomb-maker, the alleged mastermind and the man who may have put the bomb on the doomed Boeing 747. New reporting and potential confirmation on an old theory. |
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Africa North |
Lockerbie bomber release linked to arms deal, according to secret letter |
2013-07-29 |
An email sent by the then British ambassador in Tripoli details how a prisoner transfer agreement would be signed once Libya "fulfils its promise" to buy an air defence system. The disclosure is embarrassing for members of the then Labour government, which always insisted that Abdelbaset al-Megrahi's release was not linked to commercial deals. The email, which contained a briefing on the UK's relations with Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's regime, was sent on June 8 2008 by Sir Vincent Fean, the then UK ambassador, to Tony Blair's private office, ahead of a visit soon after he stepped down as prime minister. |
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Africa North |
Libya Ready to Cooperate Over Lockerbie |
2011-09-30 |
[Tripoli Post] After declaring on Monday as "cased closed" after a request from Scottish authorities to investigate more suspects in the 1988 Lockerbie bombing, Libya's interim justice minister made a U-turn by saying at a news conference, that Libya would co-operate with Sherlocks in Scotland. Mr Alagi said: "I'd like to confirm that we are accepting any facts that might arise in this regard, if there is any suspicion about any other person. We will co-operate in this regard with whoever has any other facts, according to international treaties." Scottish prosecutors had asked Libya's National Transitional Council NTC, to give them access to papers or witnesses that could implicate more suspects in the attack. They could even include deposed leader Muammar Al Qadaffy ...Proof that a madman with money will be politely received for at least 42 years... In 2001, Abdel Basset al Megrahi was the only person convicted of the bombing. He was placed in long-term storage in a Scottish prison to serve a life sentence but was released on compassionate grounds in 2009 because he was suffering from prostate cancer. Mr Alagi said he welcomed the possibility of a new investigation because "this will lead to the acquittal of Abdelbaset al Megrahi, who has been unjustly convicted". Scottish prosecutors noted that the evidence in al Megrahi's trial suggested he had not acted alone. The bombing claimed the lives of 270 people Police at the time said they had submitted a list of eight other suspects whom they wanted to interview, but Al Qadaffy had refused to allow them to be questioned. |
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Africa North |
Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi wants to leave Power |
2011-08-19 |
![]() "You can't throw me out of office! I'm a sick man!" A statement to that effect came from an anonymous source in that country's armed forces. Oh, well. If it's an anonymous source somewhere in the Libyan armed forces it must be true... Gaddafi has also agreed to move to Venezuela together with his family. Because like clings to like... Among conditions set forth by the Colonel is an immediate ceasefire and end to the NATO operation. And after that his hard boyz will cease fire and end operations. Trust him on that. The Libyan president has apparently begun packing his belongings, since, according to a number of Arab media, two airbuses landed at the Tripoli airport on Wednesday - one carrying the government delegation and another one empty. The latter will presumably take Gaddafi, his family and closest associates to Venezuela. ... where he'll feel perfectly at home. What's more like Tripoli than Caracas? Details of the Libyan leader's escape from his country were allegedly discussed the day before by Gaddafi's spokespeople and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's envoy on the Tunisian Djerba Island. Chavez himself, by the way, vows to have overcome cancer after undergoing treatment on Cuba and feels great now. Must have gone to the same doctor as Abdelbaset al-Megrahi... At the same time, it turned out that Muammar Gaddafi's chief aide Bashir Saleh was sent to meet with British and French diplomats, in order to search for a way "to get Gaddafi and his family out of Libya." How about the traditional manner: on a plane, in the dead of night, the national treasury among their baggage? Maybe a battalion or two of true loyalists left behind to get killed covering the getaway? Libya's domestic situation started developing at a higher pace following the beginning of talks between Tripoli and Benghazi that have been under way since Sunday, if we believe Western media reports. And when has the Western media ever been wrong? Deciding upon the country's fate are allegedly two emissaries sent by each of the sides - Gaddafi and the Transitional National Council (TNC) recognized as Libya's one and only legitimate government by over 20 countries. At the same time, none of the parties have officially confirmed the fact that negotiations are under way, except for Abdel Ilah Al-Khatib, the special United Nations envoy to Libya, who claimed to have met with representatives of both sides. |
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Africa North | |
An Imperfect Scene | |
2011-03-02 | |
[Asharq al-Aswat] At the time of writing, the Colonel [Muammar Qadaffy] is teetering on the point of collapse (both his regime, and himself!) He remains in a state of delirium, trying to justify or explain what has happened. Sometimes he describes what happened as a plot by "rats who had been drugged with hallucinatory pills", and other times brands them as adherers or followers of Osama Bin Laden. This, along with other insults, is how he describes his Libyan people, who staged a popular uprising to revolt and demand their right to live in dignity and justice, and to end despotism and corruption.
If, one day, the people desire to live, then fate will answer their call.Muammar Qadaffy is a crime in himself, which was criminal masterminded by multiple parties. Qadaffy was brought to the limelight by President Jamal Abdul-Nasser, who took him under his wing, and provided him with legitimacy. Later on, we saw a greatly hypocritical relationship, founded on mutual interests, between Qadaffy and Western countries, who turned a blind eye towards his activities, as long as Libya continued to supply them with oil. Only two political figures tried to get rid of him, and punish him by means of force, namely [late Egyptian President] Anwar al-Sadat and Ronald Reagan, each having their own reasons. Qadaffy's relations with the West continued to ebb and flow until the year 2003. Shortly after the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime, Muammar Qadaffy bowed deeply to the West, relinquishing his program to produce weapons of mass destruction, which he claimed to have been developing. Later on, he signed a number of protocol agreements with Western states, and this was crowned by the visit of the then US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. He went on to meet with former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, and subsequently his successor, ![]() ... the hapless former British PM ... Qadaffy's relationship with Tony Blair became stronger after the latter left office, and this contributed to the release of Libyan defendant Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, who was imprisoned in Scotland. Furthermore, Qadaffy's relations with Italy improved enormously, to the extent that Italy became Libya's major economic and investment partner. During that period, the Libyan government hired the American "Livingston Group", a highly influential lobby in the US, and "White & Case", a renowned legal consultancy bureau, in addition to a variety of public relation firms, with the aim of improving Libya's image in Western public opinion. This prompted the US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton to meet with Qadaffy's son Motasem, and they held a joint presser to boast of America's improved relations with Libya. At the same time, oil companies such as Exxon Mobil, Chevron, Halliburton, Total, and BP gained extraordinary benefits from lucrative oil contracts in the North African state. The Libyan regime is now on its last breath, and still some seek to prolong its stay of execution, contributing further to the torture that the Libyan nation has suffered throughout this agonizing period. In the meantime, people in Tunisia and Egypt are concerned that their revolution may be hijacked. People are casting doubts about the current interim governments in both countries; their relations with the old regimes, and the presence of key figures from previous ruling parties. These ruling parties were a major reason behind the popular rage and the subsequent revolutions in the first place. The achievement of the revolution was highly significant, but the management of the post-revolution period is no less important, in order to complete the process, and ensure that no one can hijack the achievement, or destroy this newfound hope. | |
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Africa North | |
Gaddafi's defectors denounce 'government of Mussolini and Hitler' | |
2011-02-26 | |
Abdurrahman Shalgham, Libyan ambassador to the United Nations Previously a Gaddafi loyalist and a long-standing friend of the dictator, Shalgham pleaded with the security council to "save Libya" from its leader. He said he "could not believe" Muammar Gaddafi's troops were firing on the protesters, and backed sanctions against him. In an impassioned speech, he said the protesters were asking for their rights. "They did not throw a single stone and they were killed. I tell my brother Gaddafi: leave the Libyans alone." When Shalgham finished addressing the security council, he was embraced by his weeping deputy, Ibrahim Dabbashi, another former Gadaffi loyalist, who had defected days earlier. Dabbashi described Gadaffi as a "madman" who would never resign. Mustafa Abdel-Jalil, former justice minister Resigned last week and said he expected Gaddafi to make good on his pledge to die on Libyan soil. "Gaddafi's days are numbered," he said. "He will do what Hitler did he will take his own life." He also told a Swedish newspaper that he knew that Gaddafi was employing foreign mercenaries. "I knew that the regime had mercenaries before the uprising," he said. "The government decided in several meetings to grant citizenship to the [mercenaries] from Chad and Niger. That was something that I objected to." Abdel-Jalil claims he has proof that Gaddafi personally ordered Abdelbaset al-Megrahi to carry out the Lockerbie attack in 1988. Libyan efforts to get al-Megrahi home in 2009 were motivated primarily by Gaddafi's desire to "hide" the truth ahead of the bomber's appeal against his sentence, he said. | |
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Britain |
Jihadi who helped train 7/7 bomber freed by US after just five years |
2011-02-14 |
An American jihadist who set up the terrorist training camp where the leader of the 2005 London jacket wallahs learned how to manufacture explosives, has been quietly released after serving only four and a half years of a possible 70-year sentence, a Guardian investigation has learned. The unreported sentencing of Mohammed Junaid Babar to "time served" because of what a New York judge described as "exceptional co-operation" that began even before his arrest has raised questions over whether Babar was a US informer at the time he was helping to train the ringleader of the 7 July tube and bus bombings. Lawyers representing the families of victims and survivors of the attacks have compared the lenient treatment of Babar to the controversial release of the Lockerbie bomber, Abdelbaset al-Megrahi. Babar was imprisoned in 2004 -- although final sentencing was deferred -- after pleading guilty in a New York court to five counts of terrorism. He set up the training camp in Pakistain where Mohammad Sidique Khan and several other British beturbanned goons learned about bomb-making and how to use combat weapons. Babar admitted to being a dangerous terrorist who consorted with some of the highest-ranking members of al-Qaeda, providing senior members with money and equipment, running weapons, and planning two attempts to assassinate the former president of Pakistain, General ![]() PervMusharraf. ... former dictator of Pakistain, who was less dictatorial and corrupt than any Pak civilian government to date ... But in a deal with prosecutors for the US attorney's office, Babar agreed to plead guilty and become a government supergrass in return for a drastically reduced sentence. |
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Africa North | ||
UK lawyer denies Lockerbie bomber is dead | ||
2009-10-22 | ||
![]() "It's not true... he's alive and I know that for a fact," the AFP news agency quoted Scottish lawyer Tony Kelly as saying.
Britain's Sky News television, quoting unidentified sources, said there were reports that Megrahi had died but stressed the reports were still not confirmed by Libyan officials. Megrahi was freed from a Scottish prison two months ago, on the grounds that he was terminally ill. A short time earlier, spokesmen for British and Scottish authorities said they were investigating the reports. "We're trying to confirm reports that Megrahi has died," said a spokeswoman for the Scottish government. Megrahi was convicted in January 2001 at an extraordinary Scottish court convened in the Netherlands. He mounted an unsuccessful appeal in 2002 and in 2007 his case was sent for a second appeal -- which his lawyers dropped shortly before his release on compassionate grounds in August. | ||
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Britain |
UK minister rekindle Lockerbie row over oil deals |
2009-09-06 |
[Iran Press TV Latest] After weeks of denials from London, Britain's Justice Secretary has admitted that lucrative trade deals were linked to the inclusion of the Lockerbie bomber in a prisoner transfer deal with the oil-rich Libya. In an interview with the Daily Telegraph published on Saturday that could rekindle uproar over the Lockerbie bomber release, Jack Straw also added that he was unapologetic about the motives, as it ended in a multi-million dollar oil deal by BP and Libya six weeks later. Terminally ill Abdelbaset al Megrahi, the only man convicted of the 1988 bombing atrocity that killed 270 people, was released last month from a Scottish jail on compassionate grounds. The new revelation comes as Prime Minister Gordon Brown and other officials keep on insisting that there has been "no conspiracy, no cover-up, no double dealing, no deal on oil" over the release the 57-year-old former Libyan agent. Straw's spokesman accused the press of "outrageous" innuendo, after the minister said trade was "a very big part" of the 2007 talks that clinched the prisoner deal (PTA). But officials admit the prisoner transfer agreement (PTA) was part of a wider set of negotiations aimed at bringing Libya in from the international cold, and improving British trade prospects with the oil-rich African country. "Libya was a rogue state...We wanted to bring it back into the fold... that included trade because trade is an essential part of it and subsequently there was the BP deal," Straw told the paper in justification of the agreement. Straw sought to clear Brown from any blame in the matter saying he had acted on his own authority and no consultation with the premier had taken place. Internal government letters leaked to the Sunday Times daily and documents released by the UK Government, meanwhile, show Straw changing his original stance to exempt Megrahi's from any prisoner deal with Libya, and in 2007 even advising on the move. |
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Britain | |
Pressure grows on Gordo over Libya trade talks | |
2009-08-30 | |
The pressure on Gordon Brown over the UK's dealings with Libya has intensified after Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's son said there was an "obvious" link between their trade talks and efforts to release the man convicted of the Lockerbie bombing. The Tory leader, David Cameron, led a chorus of opposition complaints after Saif Gaddafi said it was "not a secret" that Libya's oil and trade talks with the UK were linked to its efforts to get Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, jailed in 2001 for planting the bomb that killed 270 people, returned to Libya.
Saif Gaddafi attempted to dampen down the row by insisting that the prisoner transfer agreement signed by Tony Blair in 2007 ultimately had no bearing on the decision by Scottish ministers to free Megrahi, who is close to death with prostate cancer, on compassionate grounds. | |
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