28

Aug

2009

Oil For Terrorist Or Is It Compassion? Are Western Ideals Real Or Romantic Figments? PDF Print E-mail
By Paul Adujie

Oil For Terrorist Or Is It Compassion? Are Western Ideals Real Or Romantic Figments?

Written by Paul I. Adujie

Lawcareer2007@aol.com

As a precursor to the invasion and occupation of Iraq by the United States and the subsequent overthrow of Saddam Hussein in March 2003, there was a US-Iraq policy supported by the United Nations, it was called the Oil-For-Food Program. It was an outgrowth of the overall policy which constituted the post 1991 US-Iraq war, fought ostensibly to dislodge Saddam Hussein’s Iraq from Kuwait which Iraq had occupied as her so-called nineteenth province! The sanctions were very broad and wide ranging, it included economic, political, diplomatic and military, among others. Notably, the No-Fly-Zone and economic blockade or embargo made life for ordinary Iraqis miserable and countless deaths occurred as a consequence. Hence the eventual Oil-For-Food and Medicine Program supervised then by the United Nations.

 

 

The matter presently at hand is really about Libya on the one hand, and then, Britain, Scotland and the United States on the other. It will be recalled that Libya was accused of responsibility for the bombing of Pan Am flight 103 out of the skies over Lockerbie in the dying days of December 19888. A so-called Libyan Intelligence agent, Abdel Basset al-Meghrahi and another Libyan of the same vocation, were fingered and accused and tried for that dastardly act. The other defendant was acquitted as the jury decided that there was insufficient evidence against that defendant. Abdel Basset al-Meghrahi was not so lucky as his professional partner. The sole evidence against Abdel Basset al-Meghrahi was a fateful purchase of a shirt he had made prior to the bombing of Pan Am flight 103. The merchant from whom he purchased the shirt, connected the dots, evidenced by the fact that a similar, if identical shirts was used in wrapping the explosives, which forensic evidence managed to have retrieved amidst the crashed site debris in Lockerbie Scotland. Base solely on this shirt and shopkeeper account, a connection albeit, tenuous, was made between the Abdel Basset al-Meghrahi, the shirt, the bomb, the bombing and the splintering of Pan Am flight 103.

 

 

Many in Scotland, including some victims of the bombing, were unconvinced that there was water-tight evidence against Abdel Basset al-Meghrahi to convict him of terrorist bombing of Pan Am flight 103. If there was no watertight evidence against the Libyan in the first place, many fair-minded Britons believed this to be the case were opposed to the conviction and sentence imposed on him in the end. The tragic loss of 270 persons in this fiery crash, which killed all 259 persons on board flight 103 and 11 more persons on the ground in Lockerbie, engendered understandable raw emotions and outrage. And the suggestion that that anyone or anything was responsible for such massive was of lives elicited revenge in the form of the severest punishments possible, for anyone who responsible.

 

Many western nations have routinely accused other nations of terrorism or sponsorship of same. Some nations as a consequence were named the Axis of Evil by George W. Bush a former president of the United States. Some nations were named rogue states, sponsors of terrorism and proliferators of atomic, biological and or nuclear weapons as well. Oppression and terrorism are evils which should be rejected by all persons. All reasonable persons! Some have argued and continue to argue that global inequalities and abject poverty wrapped in hopelessness is the cause source of terrorism, terrorism seem to derive from oppression, almost always and invariably so. It is therefore argued that global security attainment will be possible, only through the reduction of abject poverty and desperation worldwide.

 

 

Until a few years ago, was a labeled and castigated by western nations as a pariah in the international community of nations. When Pan Am airline was bombed out the skies in 1988, western nations “linked” Libya almost inexplicably to the flaming inferno and air crashing deaths in Scotland. Libya was at the time an outcast to Western nations. It is unclear how this perception of Libya by the West, seeming without direct and specific evidence precipitated the accusations against Libya as a rogue nation and therefore, Libyan agents as actors in the criminal enterprise of bombing Pan Am flight 103 out of the skies. There were raw emotions by the massive loss of lives, and these emotions were further inflamed, by the belief in the western world, that Libyan Intelligence agents were the culprits. This obviously may have impacted the outcome, the conviction and sentence of Abdel Basset al-Meghrahi, who allegedly acted in concerted with another defendant, who was never convicted. This exoneration of the other defendant heightens the possible innocence of Abdel Basset al-Meghrahi, but for his connection with the store-bought shirts as told to the trial by the storekeeper.

 

Many in Scotland, including some members of victim families doubted conviction and sentence of Abdel Basset al-Meghrahi, some in the legal community also expressed reservation as to the fact of a single evidence by the storekeeper which was never corroborated by anyone else or through any other source. Baset Meghrahi filed an appeal while that appeal was pending he became afflicted with cancer of the prostrate, and was told it was terminal. Scotland made a deal with the prisoner.  He will be released, if he dropped his insistence on proving that he is innocent of the charges which led to his conviction and sentence to life in jail. After several years of confinement, coupled with being afflicted with cancer of the prostrate of terminal variety, there was really no choice to be made by the prisoner. He took the offer and jetted out of Scotland within hours of being freed from the slammer dungeon life.

 

Baset Megrhahi arrived in Libya to an uproarious flag waving welcome by joyously proud Libyans, this, according to critics in western nations, was contrary to the gentleman agreement entered into by the leader of Libya, Moumar Ghaddaffi. Adding the fuels and accelerants of tsunami of blistering criticisms in western nations, was what filtered out in the midst of all this. Britain had feigned powerlessness over the Scot’s legal system and political leadership, in the freedom-for-terrorist-affair; then came word, that some in Britain actually exerted pressure and lobby efforts targeting Scotland, on behalf of Libya, efforts and lobby, to free the prisoner, motivated by an oil deal which is in the works between Libya and a plethora of British oil multinationals.

 

Since this seismic revelations about this Oil-For-Terrorist angle of the twisted fate of Abdel Basset al-Meghrahi saga, high ranking office holders in the United States including Senator Charles Schumer, the senior US senator from the state of New York, as well as the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) and sundry victim families, have publicly fumed about the release of Baset Meghrahi whose innocence they say is assailable. The FBI Director, Mr. Mueller actually, took an extraordinary step of writing to express his consummate displeasure to the authorities of Scotland, and Scotland promptly accused him of breaching order, protocol, convention and rules of diplomatic engagement etc.

 

It is worth a mention that these reactions were all in the works, as soon as suggestions and speculations surfaced in the media, regarding the possible release and freedom for Abdel Basset al-Meghrahi, and the tempo and intensity was made worse by the incremental indecencies which seemed to have belied the release of and freedom for Abdel Basset al-Meghrahi, this is so, in the eyes and perspectives of victims’ families in particular.

 

Those who were somewhat unhappy about release and freedom of someone who, in their assessment, remains the cause of their bereavements, release and freedom, hinged on compassion for a prisoner with terminal illness and near-death, became more incensed as they learned of the pressure and lobby efforts exacted on Scotland by Britain. Then, there is now the incendiary crescendo, for the victims’ families as they now have to add acid and salt to their still very raw bereavement injuries, with the outwardly unconscionable outrage perpetrated against them and the memory of their loved ones, in the name of a contemplated business deal for British multinational oil companies.

 

In the eyes and from the perspectives of victims’ families, this Oil-For-Terrorist deal is the unkindest cut, and the ultimate betrayal by those who saw to it, that Abdel Basset al-Meghrahi is now a freeman. Among the questions being asked by victims’ families and even the average person, is whether Baset should have remained in prison, while he pursued his appeals to determine whether his conviction remained sustainable, based on the sole uncorroborated evidence of a lone witness, the storekeeper who connected him to a particular shirt purchase.

 

Would he have been eventually vindicated? Did he compromise his insistence on his professed innocence in order to have a shortcut to freedom in view of his precarious state of health? Or, is his release justified? Is this really all about oil or compassion?  Or is this really an Oil- For-Terrorist Release Program?

 

 

 



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RobotRobot is offline

 # 1 | 28.08.2009 21:58

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I Love NigeriaI Love Nigeria is offline

 # 2 | 28.08.2009 23:28

August 29, 2009
Qaddafi Cancels Plans to Stay in New Jersey

By ANAHAD O’CONNOR
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/29/nyregion/29libya.html?_r=1&hp=&pagewanted=print


Amid pressure from New Jersey political leaders, the Libyan government has canceled plans for its nation’s president, Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, to stay in New Jersey during his visit to the United States next month.

Colonel Qaddafi’s change of plan was confirmed on Friday by Representative Steven R. Rothman, a New Jersey Democrat, and by the State Department, according to The Associated Press.

In an interview, Mr. Rothman said Colonel Qaddafi and his delegation had decided instead to stay in New York City. He said he spoke to a top lobbyist for the Libyan government on Friday afternoon “who informed me that a final decision had been made to the effect that Muammar el-Qaddafi would be confining his stay to Manhattan.”

The Libyan Consulate in New York did not respond to a message seeking comment.

Colonel Qaddafi, who is to address the United Nations during his visit, had planned to erect a Bedouin-style tent on a Libyan-owned estate that sits next to a yeshiva in Englewood, a New Jersey suburb with a sizable Orthodox Jewish community.

That announcement ignited an uproar, prompting city officials to seek an injunction to stop renovations on the property and leading local leaders to schedule a rally near the estate over the weekend.

Many residents were bothered by the Libyan leader’s past sponsorship of terrorists, and were particularly angered by his warm reception of Abdel Basset Ali al-Megrahi, convicted of the 1988 bombing of a jetliner over Lockerbie, Scotland, who was released from prison last week.

Working with the State Department and the White House, Mr. Rothman pushed for Colonel Qaddafi to be restricted to Manhattan.

Mr. Rothman pointed out that when the Libyan government bought the Englewood estate in 1982, it signed an agreement limiting its use to the Libyan ambassador to the United Nations and his or her family.

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I Love NigeriaI Love Nigeria is offline

 # 3 | 01.09.2009 12:37

Britain argued earlier, that Scotland acted independently and they, in Britain, had nothing WHATSOEVER, to do with the decisions. But, here now are some glimmer of the truth? - ILN

Hence we wrote in "Oil For Terrorist" :
Baset Megrhahi arrived in Libya to an uproarious flag waving welcome by joyously proud Libyans, this, according to critics in western nations, was contrary to the gentleman agreement entered into by the leader of Libya, Moumar Ghaddaffi. Adding the fuels and accelerant of tsunami of blistering criticisms in western nations, was what filtered out in the midst of all this. Britain had feigned powerlessness over the Scot’s legal system and political leadership, in the freedom-for-terrorist-affair; then came word, that some in Britain actually exerted pressure and lobby efforts targeting Scotland, on behalf of Libya, efforts and lobby, to free the prisoner, motivated by an oil deal which is in the works between Libya and a plethora of British oil multinationals.



September 1, 2009
Lockerbie Correspondence Is Released
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2009/09/01/world/AP-EU-Britain-Lockerbie.html

Filed at 12:23 p.m. ET

LONDON (AP) -- Newly disclosed letters indicate that Britain's Middle East minister and other officials advised Scotland's government that there were no legal obstacles to returning the Pan Am Flight 103 bomber to his native Libya.

The letters published Tuesday also show diplomats explained that the U.K. had never made a binding promise to the United States to keep Abdel Baset al-Megrahi jailed in Scotland.

A separate file of correspondence shows that British Justice Secretary Jack Straw initially believed al-Megrahi should be excluded from a prisoner transfer agreement signed between the U.K. and Libya, but later changed his mind -- saying he did not wish to damage the ''beneficial relationship'' between the two countries.

Al-Megrahi was jailed for the 1988 bombing that killed 270 people -- mainly Americans. Scottish officials released him last month on compassionate grounds -- because he is terminally ill with cancer -- rather than under a transfer agreement.

Officials insisted in the Foreign Office letters that only Scotland's government could decide whether to send the convict home, but offered assurance that London did not believe it would breach international law, or risk souring ties with key allies, if Scottish ministers did so.

In a letter sent Aug. 3, Ivan Lewis, Britain's Middle East minister, told Scottish Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill that Britain's government didn't believe returning al-Megrahi home would breach promises made to the United States or United Nations.

''The U.K. government's assessment remains that while the U.S. pressed the U.K. to provide a definitive commitment on the future imprisonment of the Lockerbie accused, the U.K. government of the day declined to do this on the grounds that it did not wish to bind the hands of future governments,'' Lewis wrote.

He said that at the time of al-Megrahi's 2001 conviction ministers could ''not rule out the possibility that our relations with Libya may one day change, as indeed they have.''

In a separate letter, sent to Scottish government official George Burgess in July, the Foreign Office told him that Britain ''did not give the U.S. an absolute commitment'' to keep al-Megrahi jailed in Scotland.

It noted that there was no ''definitive commitment, legal or otherwise,'' to prevent al-Megrahi's return.

Parts of both letters, including the name of the official within the Foreign Office's Middle East and North Africa desk who wrote the July note, were redacted in the versions made public.

A separate file of correspondence between Scotland's government and officials from Britain's justice ministry shows that Straw initially believed al-Megrahi should be excluded from an agreement between Britain and Libya on the future transfer of prisoners.

But, in a letter sent to Scottish officials in December 2007, Straw changed his position and said he had decided al-Megrahi should be included, ''in view of the overwhelming interests of the United Kingdom.''

In February, Straw told Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond that it would be always be for Scottish ministers to decide al-Megrahi's fate.

''Given these safeguards, I do not believe that it is necessary or sensible to risk damaging our wide-ranging and beneficial relationship with Libya by inserting a specific inclusion into the'' prisoner transfer agreement, Straw wrote.

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I Love NigeriaI Love Nigeria is offline

 # 4 | 02.09.2009 17:26

September 3, 2009
Brown Says No Lockerbie Deal Made
By SARAH LYALL
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/03/world/europe/03lockerbie.html?hp=&pagewanted=print

LONDON — Breaking his long silence on the Scottish government’s decision to free the only man convicted in the 1988 Lockerbie bombing, Prime Minister Gordon Brown declared Wednesday that there had been no backdoor deals and “no cover-up.”

“There was no conspiracy, no cover-up, no double dealing, no deal on oil, no attempt to instruct Scottish ministers, no private assurances by me to Colonel Qaddafi,” he told reporters in Birmingham, referring to the Libyan leader, Muammar el-Qaddafi.

Mr. Brown also repeated what his government has been saying all along: that the decision to release the prisoner, Abdel Basset Ali al-Megrahi, had been entirely in the hands of the Scottish authorities.

“Our interest throughout has been to strengthen the coalition against international terrorism,” he said. “I made it clear that for us there was never a linkage between any other issue and the Scottish government’s own decision about Megrahi’s future.”

But Mr. Brown refused to say whether he agreed with the Scottish government’s decision.

The release on Aug. 20 of Mr. Megrahi, who had served eight years of a minimum 27-year sentence in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland in 1988, has raised an international furor. The Scottish government has said that it was acting compassionately, under Scottish law, because Mr. Megrahi has terminal prostate cancer and, according to medical experts, has less than three months to live.

But Mr. Brown’s government has been accused of putting pressure on Scotland, whether explicitly or subtly, to release Mr. Megrahi as a way of improving relations between Britain and Libya.

“Developing a strong relationship with Libya, and helping it reintegrate into the international community, is good for the U.K,” Mr. Straw told Alex Salmond, Scotland’s first minister, in a letter from 2008 that was made public on Tuesday.

Despite their eagerness to improve relations with Libya and to secure billions of dollars worth of oil deals with Mr. Qaddafi’s government, British officials have consistently denied that they tried to influence the Scottish decision about Mr. Megrahi.

Meanwhile, in Edinburgh on Wednesday, the ruling Scottish National party was embarrassed when opposition parties banded together in the Scottish Parliament and voted to officially condemn the handling of the Megrahi affair.

“Tonight’s vote is a clear message to Alex Salmond that the S.N.P. government’s decision to release Mr. Megrahi back to Libya is not in the Parliament’s name,” said Annabel Goldie, leader of the Conservative Party in Scotland. “Mr. Salmond’s boast that he stands up for Scotland is in tatters.”

Kenny MacAskill, Scotland’s justice secretary and a member of the Scottish National Party, once again defended the government’s handling of the Megrahi case. He had, he said, received conflicting and confusing advice from the British authorities as he made his decision.

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I Love NigeriaI Love Nigeria is offline

 # 5 | 02.09.2009 17:29

September 2, 2009
US Envoy (Ambassador Susan Rice) Urges Restraint From Libyan Leader at UN
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Filed at 5:03 p.m. ET
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2009/09/02/world/AP-UN-UN-US-Libya.html?pagewanted=print

UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice challenged Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi on Wednesday to behave himself during his upcoming first-ever U.N. visit.

Rice, speaking as the incoming president of the U.N. Security Council this month, cited broad U.S. anger over Libya's enthusiastic homecoming for Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, the only man convicted in the 1988 bombing of a Pan Am jet over Lockerbie, Scotland.

Gadhafi is among the world leaders expected to attend the 192-nation U.N. General Assembly and possibly other high-level meetings in late September, including a U.S.-sponsored session on nuclear nonproliferation and disarmament to be held by the 15-nation Security Council and chaired by President Barack Obama.

''It goes without saying that virtually every American has been offended by the reception accorded to Mr. Megrahi in Libya upon his return from the U.K.,'' Rice said in answer to a reporter's question.

''This is a very raw and sensitive subject for all Americans, having lost 270 of our compatriots in a terrorist act,'' she said. ''And how President Gadhafi chooses to comport himself when he attends the General Assembly and the Security Council in New York has the potential to either further aggravate those feelings and emotions, or not.''

Gadhafi, who also was elected to head the African Union this year, has been on a multiyear quest to repair his international image.

The Libyan strongman, who celebrated his 40th year as ruler of the oil-rich North African country Monday, has denounced terrorism and weapons of mass destruction and compensated the families of the victims of Pan Am 103.

Gadhafi is known for hours-long, rambling speeches, but Rice said such rhetoric wouldn't be tolerated.

Rice said Gadhafi -- like all other heads of state -- would be expected to limit remarks to the topic at hand -- containing the spread of nuclear arms -- and keep them to 5 minutes.

''It would be out of order and inappropriate for any head of state to address topics unrelated to that,'' she said, adding that most nations have assured her their leader's remarks will be brief ''and we expect no less from President Gadhafi should he come.''

Rice also said she was assured by her counterparts at the Libyan U.N. mission ''that their intention is to confine their program to New York City.''

Gadhafi had wanted to stay during at Libya's 5-acre (2-hectare) estate in Englewood, New Jersey, and pitch a ceremonial Bedouin-style tent to entertain guests. He decided to stay in New York amid rising opposition to a visit by Englewood residents and officials.

Libya holds a seat on the Security Council, the powerhouse arm of the U.N., until the end of this year. And in June, Ali Abdessalam Treki, a former Libyan ambassador to the United Nations who has been overseeing his nation's dealings with the African Union, won election to become the next president of the General Assembly this fall.

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I Love NigeriaI Love Nigeria is offline

 # 6 | 05.09.2009 14:45

I told you so! ha! - ILN

Oil Part of Lockerbie Talks, Official Says
http://news.aol.com/article/oil-trade-talks-helped-free-libya-bomber/630527?icid=main|main|dl1|link2|http%3A%2F%2Fnews.aol.com%2Farticle%2Foil-trade-talks-helped-free-libya-bomber%2F630527

By JILL LAWLESS, AP
posted: 1 HOUR 59 MINUTES AGOcomments: 846filed under: Law News, Terrorism NewsWith HP wireless printers, you could have printed this from any room in the house. Live wirelessly. Print wirelessly.

PRINT|E-MAILMOREText SizeAAALONDON (Sept. 5) - Trade and oil considerations played a major role in the decision to include the Lockerbie bomber in a prisoner transfer agreement between Britain and Libya, a senior British official said in an interview published Saturday.

Justice Secretary Jack Straw said trade, particularly a deal for oil company BP PLC, was "a very big part" of the 2007 negotiations that led to the prisoner deal. The agreement was part of a wider warming of relations between London and Tripoli.
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Lockerbie ControversyLeon Neal, AFP / Getty Images12 photos Oil trade with Libya played "a very big part" in Britain's decision to include the Lockerbie bomber in a 2007 prisoner transfer agreement between the two countries, British Justice Minister Jack Straw said in an interview published Saturday. The Scottish government rejected that deal but released Abdel Baset al-Megrahi on compassionate grounds last month(Note: Please disable your pop-up blocker)

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http://www.aolcdn.com/ke/media_gallery/v1/ke_media_gallery_wrapper.swf
Lockerbie Controversy

The Scottish government is expected to announce Thursday that Lockerbie bomber Abdel Baset al-Megrahi will be released from prison on compassionate grounds. Al-Magri, 57, suffers from terminal cancer. He was convicted in 2001 of taking part in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103. The airliner blew up over Lockerbie, Scotland, on Dec. 21, 1988, killing 270 people.
Crown Office / AP
Crown Office / AP

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"Libya was a rogue state," Straw was quoted as saying by The Daily Telegraph newspaper. "We wanted to bring it back into the fold and trade is an essential part of it — and subsequently there was the BP deal."

The British government has faced intense criticism over the release of Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, a Libyan convicted in the 1988 bombing of a Pan Am airliner over Lockerbie, Scotland. The attack killed 259 people aboard the plane, most of them American, and 11 on the ground.

Last month Scottish officials freed al-Megrahi, 57, on compassionate grounds because he is dying of prostate cancer.

Although he was not released under the prisoner transfer agreement, opposition politicians, and many victims' families, claim business considerations influenced the decision to free him.
On Wednesday, Prime Minister Gordon Brown insisted there was "no conspiracy, no cover up, no double dealing, no deal on oil" over the bomber's release.

But officials admit the prisoner transfer agreement 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 nation.

David Lidington, foreign affairs spokesman for the main opposition Conservatives, said it was "very hard to square what Jack Straw says today with Gordon Brown's repeated denials of any kind of deal."

"That's why we need an independent inquiry to get to the truth."
Documents released by the government show Straw had originally tried to ensure that al-Megrahi was exempted from any prisoner deal with Libya, but in December 2007 he changed his mind. He wrote in a letter to his Scottish counterpart that "wider negotiations with the Libyans are reaching a critical stage" and a blanket agreement was in "the overwhelming interests for the United Kingdom."

Soon after, Libya ratified a $900 million oil exploration deal with BP. The oil company acknowledged Friday that it had urged the government to sign the prisoner transfer deal, but insisted it had not singled out al-Megrahi as part of the discussion.

Straw said Brown had not been involved in negotiations over the prisoner agreement.

"I certainly didn't talk to the PM," he was quoted as saying. "There is no paper trail to suggest he was involved at all."

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2009-09-05 08:39:10
 

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