Gaddafi slams 'greedy' Lockerbie families

Updated 11.08 Fri Aug 29 2008
Keywords: Lockerbie, Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, Libya

The son of Libyan leader Colonel Muammar Gaddafi has accused relatives of the Lockerbie victims of being "very greedy" for seeking compensation.

Saif al-Islam al-Gaddafi said the Lockerbie families had traded with "the blood of their sons and daughters" during negotiations over payouts for the deaths of loved ones.

Saif al-Islam al-Gaddafi said the Lockerbie families had traded with "the blood of their sons and daughters" during negotiations over payouts for the deaths of loved ones

Mr al-Gaddafi, who is seen by many as likely to succeed his father, said the Libyan government had only taken responsibility for Britain's worst terrorist attack in order to get international sanctions lifted.

He said: "The negotiation (the families) was very terrible and very materialistic and was very greedy. They were asking for more money and more money and more money.

"I think they were very greedy and I think they were trading with the blood of their sons and daughters."

But Dr Jim Swire, whose daughter Flora was one of the 270 people killed when Pan Am flight 103 from London to New York was blown up over Lockerbie on December 21, 1988, said the compensation received by relatives could never make up for the loss of loved ones.

He said: "I just wish that the needs of the relatives, namely a thirst for the truth and for justice would be attended to, rather than an alleged hunger for money.

"So far as many relatives I know would say, we would gladly repay any 'compensation' money if we could just have our loved ones back.

"Financial 'compensation' must remain in its inverted commas. Money cannot buy our families back."

In a letter published in The Herald newspaper, Dr Swire said the Libyan government's admission of guilt for the Lockerbie bombing had allowed its economy to recover while giving the West access to the country's oil industry.

"The Libyans have achieved what they want and Western commerce has got what it wanted too. In this, many of us feel like pawns," he wrote.

Meanwhile fresh doubts have been cast on who is to blame for the bombing attrocity.

A witness who helped convict Libyan secret service agent Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi of bringing down Pan Am flight 103 has now changed his story.

Electronics engineer Ulrich Lumpert says what he told the trial about the timing device said to have detonated the explosives was wrong.

A key part of the evidence in the case was a singed fragment of a timer traced to Swiss company Mebo, where Mr Lumpert worked.

Mebo admitted selling timers to Libya but Mr Lumpert now claims the fragment found was part of a non-functional timer that could not possibly have helped to bring down Pan Am 103.

Mr Lumpert now says the bombing could not have happened in the way prosecutors described it, leaving more questions unanswered about the Lockerbie bombing.

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