On this Day 14th November, 1991,US accuses Libyans of Lockerbie bombing
Two
Libyan intelligence officers have been accused of masterminding the Lockerbie
bombing.
The
United States has called on Libyan leader Colonel Gaddafi to hand over the two
men, Abdel Basset Ali Al-Megrahi and Al Amin Khalifa Fhimah.
The
men have been indicted in the US on 193 charges, including three which carry
the death penalty.
Arrest
warrants have also been issued for the two Libyans in Scotland on charges of
murder and conspiracy in relation to bombing of Pan Am flight 103 in December
1988.
The
plane was en route from London to New York when it exploded over Lockerbie in
Scotland, killing all 259 people on board and 11 people on the ground.
President
George Bush is to consult British Prime Minister John Major and other world
leaders over the next few days to decide the international response.
Both
President Bush and Mr Major have refused to rule out military action if Libya
fails to hand over the suspects for trial.
However,
Libya's ambassador to France, Saeeb Mujber, has said his country would not
comply with the indictments.
Mr
Mujber told the BBC that surrendering the two men would be to surrender Libya's
sovereignty.
Libya
had been implicated as an excuse for a military assault, he added.
"'This
is a political thing. This is a lynching to bring Libya to its knees," Mr
Mujber said.
But
the US acting Attorney General, William Barr, said a fragment from the Toshiba
radio-cassette recorder which contained the bomb linked the accused to the
crime.
"Scientists
determined that it was part of the bomb's timing device and traced it to its
manufacturer - a Swiss company that had sold it to a high-level Libyan
intelligence official," Mr Barr said.

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