Libya asks for Lockerbie bomber to be freed

LONDON (Reuters) – The Libyan government has  formally asked Scotland for the compassionate release of the  former Libyan agent jailed for the 1988 Lockerbie bombing, the  Scottish government said yesterday.  

Libyan authorities made the application on behalf of Abdel  Basset al Megrahi, who was sentenced to life for blowing up a  Pan Am airliner over the Scottish town of Lockerbie. 
 
All 259 people on board the London to New York flight were  killed, including 189 Americans, along with 11 people on the  ground.  
“We can confirm an application for compassionate release has  been made by Mr al-Megrahi, and forwarded by the Libyan  Government to the Scottish Ministers,” a Scottish government  spokeswoman said in a statement.” 
 
Scottish ministers will not comment on the content of the  application and will now seek advice on the application.”  
Libya has repeatedly brought up the fate of the 57-year-old  Megrahi, who has terminal prostate cancer, most recently at a  meeting in Italy between Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi and  British Prime Minister Gordon Brown earlier this month.  

But the British government has said it is a matter for  Scotland, which has a separate legal system from the rest of  Britain.  
Scotland’s First Minister Alex Salmond and Justice Secretary  Kenny MacAskill will now consider whether the application should  be granted. 
  
If it is, Megrahi would not be required to drop his appeal  against his conviction.  
Earlier this month, the Scottish Appeal Court said his  hearing would not be concluded until next year, raising concern  that Megrahi will die before the appeal is settled. 
 
Megrahi, convicted in 2001 in a special Scottish court  meeting in the Netherlands, is in Greenock prison in Scotland.  
Some relatives of those killed in the bombing support the  move to allow him to go home, since they have never been  convinced of the Libyan’s guilt.