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Scotland lawmakers to meet on Lockerbie release
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-08-24 22:53 EDINBURGH: Scottish legislators held an emergency debate Monday on the government's decision to release the Lockerbie bomber as critics claimed the act could severely damage relations with the United States.
Lawmakers want to question Salmond's minority government about the decision, with some demanding that Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill resign. Al-Megrahi — the only man convicted of killing 270 people in the 1988 airline bombing — was released last week on compassionate grounds because he is terminally ill with prostate cancer. He returned to a warm welcome Thursday night in his native Libya. In a strongly worded letter to the Scottish government, FBI director Robert Mueller said al-Megrahi's release gave comfort to terrorists, while Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, said releasing the bomber was "obviously a political decision." Opening the debate in the Scottish parliament, MacAskill acknowledged Monday that the release was "a global issue" but stressed that the decision to free al-Megrahi had been his alone. MacAskill has said earlier that he followed all the correct procedures under Scottish law and was not influenced by political considerations. Some Scottish lawmakers want to distance themselves from the decision by Scotland's nationalist administration, which advocates full independence from Britain.
However, former Scottish First Minister Henry McLeish slammed Mueller's criticism as "wholly wrong" and said the FBI chief should keep his thoughts to himself. "The Americans have a right to make their views known, but I think it was wholly wrong for the director of the FBI to speak in such striking terms, which were personal, and which made a direct attack on the Scottish criminal justice system," said McLeish, who served as Scottish leader from 2000 until his resignation in 2001. McLeish also disputed the notion that the Lockerbie bomber's release would poison relations with the United States. Web sites have been set up in the US calling for a boycott of Scottish goods and visits to the country. "I don't buy for a minute the idea that this is going to destroy our special relationship with the US, nor will it destroy trade between Britain and America," McLeish told the BBC. As for a boycott, "it would bother me if I thought it was going to happen," he said, dismissing the idea as the brainchild of "certain newscasters and shock jocks." On Sunday, Salmond said it was wrong to assume that all those affected by the bombing were opposed to al-Megrahi's release. "I understand the huge and strongly held views of the American families, but that's not all the families who were affected by Lockerbie," Salmond told the BBC. "A number of the families, particularly in the U.K., take a different view and think that we made the right decision." |