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UK had feared Gaddafi could harm if Lockerbie bomber was not released | Secret cables released by the whistleblower website 'Wikileaks' have revealed that Britain feared the fact that Libyan leader Colonel Muammar Gaddafi could "cut us off at the knees, just like the Swiss", if the Lockerbie bomber
was not released. According to the Telegraph, Vincent Fean, Britain's ambassador to Tripoli at that time, also warned that continuing to hold Abdelbaset Al-Megrahi
in a prison in Scotland could have "disastrous implications for British interests
in Libya". Fifty-seven-year-old al-Megrahi was jailed in 2001 for the atrocity,
which claimed 270 lives in 1988. He was allowed to return home to Libya to a hero's
welcome in August 2009. The paper quoted one of the cables as saying that the
British ambassador had expressed relief that Megrahi was likely to be returned
on compassionate grounds. "He noted that a refusal of Megrahi's request could
have had disastrous implications for British interests in Libya," the leaked cable
said. It also quoted the ambassador as saying: "They could have cut us off at
the knees, just like the Swiss." His warnings were a reference to Col Gaddafi's
call in 2008 for a jihad against Switzerland when police arrested his son Hannibal
and daughter in law Aline Skaf, but the couple were released and charges relating
to an altercation with their servants dropped, the paper said. However, Libya
responded by withdrawing billions of dollars from Swiss banks, cutting off oil
supplies, denying visas and recalling diplomats. At the time of Al-Megrahi's release,
Prime Minister Gordon Brown had said that the UK Government had played no role
in the release. |
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