Skip to main content

Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi threatened to cut trade with Britain and warned of "enormous repercussions" if the Lockerbie bomber died in jail, Britain's Guardian newspaper said on Wednesday, citing U.S. diplomatic cables obtained by WikiLeaks.

Abdel Basset al-Megrahi, jailed for life for his part in blowing up Pan Am Flight 103 over Scotland in 1988, was freed by Scottish authorities in August 2009 on compassionate grounds, as he had prostate cancer and was thought to have just months to live.

The release fuelled anger in the United States, because 189 of the 270 victims were American, and the fact he remains alive today has stirred suspicion over the reason for his release.

"The Libyans have told HMG (Her Majesty's Government) flat out that there will be 'enormous repercussions' for the UK-Libya bilateral relationship if Megrahi's early release is not handled properly," U.S. diplomat Richard LeBaron wrote in a cable to Washington in October 2008.

Libya "convinced UK embassy officers that the consequences if Megrahi were to die in prison ... would be harsh, immediate and not easily remedied," the U.S. ambassador to Libya was quoted as saying in another cable in Jan. 2009.

"Specific threats have included the immediate cessation of all UK commercial activity with Libya, a diminishment or severing of political ties, and demonstrations against official UK facilities," said U.S. Ambassador Gene Cretz.

Libyan officials had implied the welfare of British diplomats and citizens in Libya would be at risk. "The regime remains essentially thuggish in its approach," he added.



The Guardian said the cables also showed Scotland's First Minister Alex Salmond had underestimated the public outcry in the United States and Britain.

It said a British civil servant had told the U.S. embassy that officials from Mr. Salmond's Scottish National Party had sought to blame the British government for putting the Scots in a position to have to make a decision.

"It is clear that the Scottish government underestimated the blowback it would receive in response to Megrahi's release and is now trying to paint itself as the victim," wrote Louis Susman, the U.S. ambassador in London, in a cable.

U.S. anger over Mr. Megrahi's release resurfaced earlier this year after suggestions British energy giant BP PLC had lobbied Scotland for Mr. Megrahi's release. BP and Scottish ministers have denied the accusations.

Britain has always conceded that its interests would be damaged if Mr. Megrahi died in a Scottish prison.

However, speaking to BBC radio on Wednesday, both Mr. Salmond and former British justice secretary Jack Straw repeated denials that Libyan pressure had played a part in the decision to allow Mr. Megrahi to return home.

"From a Scottish government perspective - and incidentally, the American information bears this out - we weren't interested in threats, we weren't interested in blandishments, we were only interested in applying Scottish justice," Mr. Salmond said.

Mr. Straw added: "Both Alex Salmond and the British government have said until they're blue in the face what is true, that this was a decision which was made by the Scottish government and by nobody else and they did it on the basis of their law."

Interact with The Globe