Revealed: the fatal flaw Leading article Kenneth…


Revealed: the fatal flaw

Leading article
Kenneth Roy
The Megrahi Scandal: Part 2



The Cafe
Ian McTurk on Megrahi


The Anna Karenina theory

Economy
Alf Young
Tolstoy has entered the debate on Britain’s fiscal policies

Film
Dharmendra Singh awards five stars to ‘Blue Valentine’


Kicked out of
the mosque

Free speech
Anthony Silkoff
A bewildering experience
in Glasgow



Life of George
Big John’s funeral


Did he kill Keats?

Person of the Week
James Clark
Profile by Barbara Millar

Gridlock

The Richard Wild series

02.02.11
No. 361

Kenny

 

Kenny Macintyre was not so much a broadcaster as a national institution. Tomorrow in SR, his brother Lorn contributes a deeply personal essay on a much-missed political journalist

The Cafe

Inverness TV interviewed James Fraser, principal of the University of the Highlands and Islands Millenium Institute, on 31 January as one of its ‘Meet the Bosses’ series. What an inspiring interview and what an inspiring man. His vision for the future UHI, which is on the threshhold of becoming Scotland’s newest fully-fledged and titled university, was breathtakingly broad. Perhaps one would expect that, from someone who attended Plockton High School when the headmaster was the late, great, perspicacious Sorley MacLean.
     Possibly nothing so momentous as the birth of the UHI has happened north of the Highland line since the devastation of the Clearances but this time bringing regeneration and hope instead of despair.
     I had finished watching the interview and went on immediately to read Thom Sherrington’s article (SR, 1 February) rightly bemoaning how little our want-it-now, celebrity-obsessed society values thought. The contrast was startling. Here was thought aplenty, envisioned as stretching years, hundreds of years perhaps, into the future.
     I believe that Thom Sherrington is absolutely right; we must teach our children to think for themselves from an early age. Unfortunately, the present thought patterns governing government schools policies militates against that.
One only has to look back a few issues of SR and re-read the appalling, numbing attitude of minds that conceived GIRFEC to realise controlling statism is well entrenched.
     It would seem that all state education is geared to achieving the outcome of obedient, indeed subservient, generations of unthinkers, who will seldom or never question what their (democratically elected of course) rulers think is best for them. It scares me – and it should scare you – but I take hope from a most unlikely source: Egypt. We have not, yet, anyway, reached the depth of subservience that the Egyptians had.
     There is another source of hope too, and that is inspirational teachers, such as Thom Sherrington, who perceive the faults and will work to rectify them.

David Grant

Click here

www.bobsmithart.com

 

 

 

Leading article

 

For the truth to be revealed,

the SNP government needs

only four weeks

 

The Megrahi Scandal: part 1

 

Kenneth Roy

 

During the public discussion between us in the Glasgow Concert Hall last week, Robert Black QC wondered aloud why the SNP, untainted by past association with the Megrahi case, had chosen not to confront this judicial scandal and attempt to correct it.

     It is easy to overlook that, when Alex Salmond came to power in May 2007, not quite all his predecessors were removed from office. One unexpectedly clung on. Why the lord advocate, of all people, survived the demise of the former administration is a question for Alex Salmond and his memoirs. It feels in retrospect like one of his few serious political misjudgements: one made when his feet were only just under the table.
     It is true that Elish Angiolini’s re-appointment was not exactly accompanied by loud rejoicing. Mr Salmond made it clear that she had lost her place at the Scottish cabinet table. That felt like a demotion, for her or her office or both. From that moment, she became an arm’s length chief law officer. But, in effect, the retention of her power base was all that mattered: this ultimate insider – lacking any significant experience of the world beyond the Crown Office – was never likely to pursue Lockerbie with the greatest zeal.
     Ten years ago this week, a panel of Scottish judges, sitting in the Netherlands without a jury, convicted Megrahi of 270 murders. It says much for the quality of the judgement that, in its first sentence, it got the date of the disaster wrong. This was the first of many wrongs, few of which have ever been righted.
     Since December 2010, the position of the Scottish government has become quite impossible. Here are two statements. I invited the lunchtime audience in Glasgow to reconcile them somehow. No one was bold enough even to try.

Statement 1

There are six grounds for believing that a miscarriage of justice may have occurred. It is in the interests of justice

Statement 2

Megrahi was convicted by a Scottish court, and Scottish ministers do not doubt the safety of his conviction

     Statement 1 – slightly paraphrased in the interests of brevity – was the conclusion of the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission, an agency of the Scottish government, in 2007. Following this remarkable finding, after a long and painstaking investigation which turned up new evidence not made available to the defence at the trial, there were two years of unexplained delays while the prisoner’s second appeal was prepared. For these delays, the Crown Office was largely responsible.

 

If the report remains unpublished, the suspicion will continue to fester – it will never go away – that there is something in this report that the legal and political establishments of Scotland would rather was never divulged.

     In the end, the appeal was never heard: the declared wish of the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission was thwarted and the interests of justice, as it saw them, were never satisfied. Megrahi, long frustrated by the impediments put in his way, dropped his appeal – it is generally believed as a pre-condition of his release – and, true to form, Mrs Angiolini and her mates in the Crown Office put up their hands and declared to the world that it had nothing whatever to do with them, guv.
     Statement 2 is taken verbatim from a Scottish government briefing just before Christmas. The chief law officer may have had some hand in its wording; otherwise, why have a chief law officer?
     Since Statement 2 flatly contradicts Statement 1, we must look for an explanation.
     Has the Scottish government in general, Mrs Angiolini in particular, simply forgotten about the conclusion of the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission? It got quite a lot attention at the time and has resurfaced periodically since, usually when people like Robert Black QC demand to know why the commission’s report has never been published. The answer repeatedly given is that publication of the report is impossible without the permission of all the parties concerned and that all the parties have not consented. This has been the excuse for the last three years; it has only now started to weaken.
     Professor Black told the Glasgow meeting that the Scottish government would require only four weeks – I repeat, four weeks – to rescind this intolerable prohibition and allow the public access to the full report. It is scarcely worth pointing out, but I will point it out anyway, that since there are six weeks remaining of this parliament there is still time to do so. If it is not done, if the report remains unpublished, the suspicion will continue to fester – it will never go away – that there is something in this report that the legal and political establishments of Scotland would rather was never divulged.
     It is, however, unlikely that the Scottish government has forgotten about the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission’s potentially damning conclusion. It is much more likely, given the uncompromising terms of Statement 2, that the Scottish ministers with or without the assistance of the lord advocate have managed to convince themselves that the most expedient way of marking 10 years of the Lockerbie scandal is simply to affirm the infallibility of Scottish justice.
     Mrs Angiolini retires as lord advocate in May, perhaps to become a senator of the college of justice. Before she goes, she should tell us to which statement she subscribes. Does she subscribe to Statement 1 with its frank acknowledgement that there may have been a serious miscarriage of justice, or does she subscribe to Statement 2, which denies any such possibility?
     The chief law officer cannot logically subscribe to both. Nor can the Scottish government as a whole.

 

Tomorrow: Part 2 of The Megrahi Scandal

 

Kenneth Roy is editor of the Scottish Review

 

 

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