With suspect in custody, spotlight returns to 1988
Lockerbie bombing
By
ADAM GELLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS • December
11, 2022
Police and investigators look at
what remains of the nose of Pan Am 103 in a field in Lockerbie, Scotland, in
this Dec. 22, 1988, file photo. U.S. and Scottish authorities said Sunday, Dec.
11, 2022, that the Libyan man suspected of making the bomb that destroyed a
passenger plane over Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988 is in U.S. custody. (Martin
Cleaver/AP)
The announcement
Sunday that a Libyan man suspected in the 1988 bombing of a passenger jet has
been taken into U.S. custody put the spotlight back on the notorious terrorist
attack and longstanding efforts to pursue those responsible.
The suspect, Abu
Agila Mas’ud Kheir Al-Marimi, is accused of building the bomb that destroyed a
Pam Am flight over the Scottish town of Lockerbie. The attack killed all 259
people aboard the plane and 11 on the ground. The majority of those killed were
Americans.
Thirty-four years
later, the public's memories of the attack have largely faded, despite
developments in the case that have intermittently returned it to the headlines.
Here's a look back:
HOW
DID THE LOCKERBIE ATTACK HAPPEN?
On Dec. 21, 1988,
a bomb planted aboard Pam Am Flight 103 exploded less than half an hour after
the jet departed London's Heathrow airport, bound for New York.
The attack
destroyed the jet, which was carrying citizens of 21 countries. Among the
victims were 190 Americans. They included 35 students from Syracuse University
in upstate New York who were flying home after a semester abroad. To this day,
the bombing remains the deadliest terrorist attack ever carried out on British
soil.
Investigators soon
tied the bombing to Libya, whose government had engaged in long-running
hostilities with the U.S. and other Western governments. About two years before
the attack, Libya was blamed for the bombing of a Berlin disco that killed
three, including two U.S. soldiers, and injured dozens of others.
WHO
WAS HELD RESPONSIBLE?
In 1991, the U.S.
charged two Libyan intelligence officers with planting the bomb aboard the jet.
But the country's leader, Col. Moammar Gadhafi, refused to turn them over.
After long negotiations, Libya agreed in 1999 to surrender them for prosecution
by a panel of Scottish judges sitting in the Netherlands.
One of the men,
Abdel Baset Ali al-Megrahi, was convicted and given a life sentence. The other,
Lamen Khalifa Fhimah, was found not guilty. Scottish officials released
Al-Megrahi on humanitarian grounds in 2009 after he was diagnosed with prostate
cancer. He died in Libya in 2012.
The families of
those killed, meanwhile, brought suit against the Libyan government, demanding
they be held accountable. In 2003, Libya agreed to a settlement, formally
accepting responsibility for the bombing, renouncing terrorism and paying
compensation to the families.
Despite a
rapprochement with the U.S. government, the pursuit of others responsible for
the bombing largely stalled, until after Ghadafi was ousted from power in 2011.
WHAT
LED INVESTIGATORS TO MAS’UD?
After Ghadafi's
fall, Mas’ud, a longtime explosives expert for the country's intelligence
service, was taken into custody by Libyan law enforcement. In 2017, U.S.
officials received a copy of an interview with Mas’ud done by Libyan
authorities soon after his arrest.
In that interview,
U.S. officials said, Mas’ud admitted to building the bomb used in the Pan Am
attack and working with the two men charged earlier to plant it on the plane.
He said the operation had been ordered by Libyan intelligence and that Ghadafi
had thanked him and others after the attack, according to an FBI affidavit.
In late 2020, the
U.S. Justice Department announced charges against Mas’ud. With Mas’ud in Libyan
custody, though, his prosecution remained largely theoretical. U.S. and
Scottish officials pledged to work for his extradition, so that he could be
tried.
It was not clear
Sunday how Mas’ud was taken into U.S. custody. He would be the first to appear
in an American courtroom for prosecution of the attack.
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