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Lockerbie bomber found dying in Libya

Calls for Abdelbaset al-Megrahi to face extradition appear redundant after footage emerges showing him close to death The campaign for the extradition of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, the man convicted of the Lockerbie bombing, has in effect ended after footage emerged showing him apparently close to death. Calls for his rearrest from US senators, lawyers and relatives of Lockerbie bombing victims appeared redundant given Megrahi’s abject condition in images recorded at his mother’s house in Tripoli. The Scottish first minister, Alex Salmond, said the Scottish government “never had any intention” of asking for Megrahi to be returned to jail. Andrew Mitchell, the UK government foreign minister, said the question was now “academic” after CNN broadcast footage showing Megrahi lying in bed unconscious and apparently “at death’s door”. Mitchell said the Tories had opposed Megrahi’s original release on compassionate grounds in 2009, but that the question of whether to extradite him was a matter for the Scottish government. He added: “It’s clear that many of these matters are now academic as his life is drawing to a close … it’s clear from reports today that he has not got much longer to live.” Megrahi’s son Khaled and brother Abdul Nasser al-Megrahi told reporters at the family home that Megrahi was now comatose and close to death. They said he had been without proper medical attention for several days, claiming his medication had been looted from pharmacists during the rebel advance into Tripoli. “There is no doctor. There is nobody to ask. We don’t have any phone line to call anybody,” Khaled al-Megrahi said. Speaking on Sky News, Salmond said recent speculation about Megrahi’s disappearance had been “completely inaccurate”. He said: “The only people who have any authority in this matter are the Scottish government, who have jurisdiction in this matter … and the new Libyan transitional council, who are the new duly constituted legal authority in Libya. “We have never had and don’t have any intention of asking for the extradition of Mr Megrahi. It’s quite clear from the Libyan transitional council that following their own laws they had never any intention of agreeing to such extradition.” On Monday the Libyan rebels’ National Transitional Council said the Megrahi case was not a priority. The justice minister, Mohammed al-Alagi, said: “We have very many important issues now. We realise this [the Megrahi case] is very important to some of our western allies. But the most crucial thing now is to secure our country. The second thing is to stabilise Libya so that it can function. After that we can look at related issues between us and other governments.” Calls for Megrahi to be either taken back into Scottish custody or extradited to the US for a fresh trial intensified last week, led by the US Republican Mitt Romney, after it emerged that Scottish officials charged with monitoring him in Libya after his early release from jail had been unable to make contact. That raised substantial questions about whether Megrahi had breached the terms of his release on licence in August 2009. On Sunday night, East Renfrewshire council and the Scottish government issued a joint statement saying they had finally made contact with Megrahi’s family over the weekend. However, East Renfrewshire officials have admitted to the Guardian that they have not yet spoken to Megrahi in person. Their last contact directly with him was on 8 August. They said they were still trying to talk to him, but confirmed that his dramatically worsening health was making that task far more difficult. “We are still in the process of re-establishing contact,” a council spokesman said on Monday morning. “We have had some contact with the family and we will continue with that.” Direct contact is “part of the licence and that is what we are aiming for, if we can do that”, he said. Romney and US relatives claim Megrahi was not properly punished for his alleged role in the Lockerbie atrocity, in which 270 crew, passengers and people on the ground were killed when Pan Am Flight 103 was blown up over the small Scottish town in December 1988. Despite his repeated claims of innocence, they also believe he could offer new evidence about Libya’s role in the bombing. John Bolton, the former US ambassador to the United Nations, said Megrahi should have received the death penalty for Lockerbie. “To me it will be a signal of how serious the rebel government is for good relations with the United States and the west if they hand over Megrahi for trial,” he said. “He killed 270 people. He served roughly 10 years in jail before he was released by British authorities. Do the math – that means he served roughly two weeks in prison for every person he killed. Two weeks per murder. That is not nearly enough.” In a statement posted on a “justice for Megrahi” page on Facebook on Saturday night, Khaled al-Megrahi said: “My father’s general health is very bad. Sometimes he is in a coma. The family is trying to help him to eat at least a little food. We move him to hospital and his parent’s house. He is still confined to his bed, and my mother and his sister are helping him. “All our house telephones are out of order. I personally tried to get in touch with the drug store to get his regular daily use of medicine. Thieves have stolen most of his medicine.” Dr Jim Swire, the Lockerbie campaigner whose daughter Flora died in the attack, said Megrahi ought to be allowed to die with dignity. “I feel in view of all he has been through that he should have been accorded a peaceful end in Tripoli with his family. The idea of extraditing him is a monstrous one,” he said. “This is a man who withdrew his appeal so that he could be allowed to die close to his family and he deserves to be left in peace for his last days.” Abdelbaset al-Megrahi Libya Lockerbie plane bombing Arab and Middle East unrest Scotland Middle East Africa Global terrorism UK security and terrorism Air transport Severin Carrell Luke Harding guardian.co.uk

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Mere weeks after a Norwegian massacre left 77 people dead , Norway’s police say they have apprehended a right-wing radical for storing weapons and explosives at his Oslo home. There’s no apparent link to mass murderer Ander Behring Breivik, however. Police are investigating the suspect for “possession of unauthorized weapons, possession…

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Catholic clergy ‘abused children for decades in County Donegal’

Report is expected to claim police were complicit in cover-up of sexual abuse by priests and lay members of the church County Donegal in Ireland is about to have its bucolic image shattered by a report into how paedophiles, both clergy and laity, abused children for decades. An investigation into clerical sex abuse in the Catholic diocese of Raphoe in County Donegal is about to report its findings, which are expected to be damning. Meanwhile, new evidence has emerged from victims of a parallel paedophile ring operating in the same Gaelic-speaking corner of the Irish Republic. A number of survivors of abuse have told the Guardian that lay members of the church as well as priests sexually exploited them for years in the county. And as with the expected conclusion of the report into Raphoe, they say the national police service, the Garda, was complicit in a culture of cover-up that allowed the perpetrators to carry on abusing them. Speaking for the first time about his abuse as a child and the subsequent cover-up, John O’Donnell revealed that he had been abused since he was nine by a lay member of a local church choir. “He assaulted me from when I was nine until I was 15, until I was old enough to know it was wrong. This man took advantage because I was adopted and regarded as something lower than most kids in the area. “The abuse took place at his home and in a shop he ran. It went on from 1965 to 1972.” O’Donnell said that in 1973 he went to a local Garda station to report that he had been raped by the man, who has since died. He said the reaction to his claim was violent. “A local guard was outraged that I was naming such a fine upstanding member of the community as a child rapist. The officer slapped me on the face and told me to get out. He said to me that I was adopted and not worth anything. From that day on I never fully trusted a member of the Garda Síochána.” For years, O’Donnell said, he hid what had happened to him, and got married and raised a family without discussing it with his loved ones. It was only in the late 1990s when revelations of widespread child abuse rocked the Irish Catholic church that he decided to face up to what had happened to him. “I found out that my abuser was still in the church choir and I was outraged because he was working with children. So I drove up to a parochial house in the area and tried to speak to the parish priest about this man. At the time I had finally got somewhere with the gardaí and they had questioned this man in a Donegal police station. I informed the parish priest about this but he wouldn’t even let me across his door. He kept saying: ‘No, no, no … I am not speaking to you about this.’ He didn’t want to know, and bear in mind this was only back in 2005.” O’Donnell has claimed that other victims in this corner of Donegal are coming forward, with a picture emerging of an organised paedophile ring. Police are investigating their claims. The Guardian has spoken to a number of other men in Donegal who have made similar allegations of an abuse ring and a cover-up spanning decades. Throughout the decades of denial, the young men who were preyed upon by paedophiles in the county, both inside and outside the church, had one champion – a retired police detective, Martin Ridge. Ridge moved to the county at the end of his career, and became so disturbed by official indifference that he wrote a book about the children’s experiences, Breaking the Silence. He predicted that the Raphoe report would be “damning” and expose the same culture of “local denial and cover-up” that was found in other Catholic dioceses across Ireland. Ridge admitted the police force he served in all his working life would not be spared withering criticism in the Raphoe report. Two years ago the Murphy report into widespread clerical abuse of children in Dublin, Ireland’s largest Catholic diocese, found that senior Garda officers colluded with four archbishops and top clerics in covering up the sex crimes of priests on a massive scale in the city. “There were 45 victims of three different paedophiles, one of whom was a priest, another a school teacher. None of the victims wanted to be interviewed in local gardaí stations. The question has to be asked as to why they did not trust the local force when this was going on,” Ridge said. The ex-Garda officer too has confirmed that an investigation is now under way into the alleged ring of abuse in north-west Ireland involving both priests and non-members of the clergy. It is understood to include an investigation into how a convicted child sex offender got a job in a local youth hostel after he was released from prison in 2006. O’Donnell, meanwhile, opted to remain living in Falcarragh, County Donegal, despite the climate of cover-up and fear he has had to endure. Surveying the natural beauty of the area, with its stunning mountains and seascapes, the 55-year-old said: “Yes, it’s a beautiful area with amazing views and scenery … it would be even more beautiful but for some of the bastards still living here.” Ireland Catholicism Children Child protection Europe Religion Christianity Social care Henry McDonald guardian.co.uk

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With Irene gone, cleanup crews began pumping water out of soggy subway tunnels, fixing traffic lights in the nation’s capital, and clearing debris from hundreds of roads as the East Coast readied for the workweek. While early indications were that the damage was not as bad as feared, it will…

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We give colleges billions in public subsidies–but what are they doing for us? That’s what editors at Washington Monthly aimed to find out with their unusual college rankings, released today. The Monthly’s roster of schools rates them not on the basis of how exclusive they are, but on how much they help their communities and

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We give colleges billions in public subsidies–but what are they doing for us? That’s what editors at Washington Monthly aimed to find out with their unusual college rankings, released today. The Monthly’s roster of schools rates them not on the basis of how exclusive they are, but on how much they help their communities and

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Not only did the Roman Catholics arrest Galileo for saying the Earth revolves around the sun. Some of them still insist he was wrong. It’s a small movement, but a few conservative Roman Catholics are turning to Church teachings and a dozen Bible verses as proof of a geocentric universe,…

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Welcome to First Look, our daily roundup of early-bird news: • Irene has left parts of Vermont and New York severely flooded, but did not turn into a big-city disaster. (AP) • Travelers are still dealing with fallout from the delays of thousands of east-coast airline flights thanks to the storm.  (New York Times) • But on

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G4S staff sacked for tagging offender’s false leg

Man tricked security firm employees by wrapping prosthetic limb in bandage, allowing him to remove it and flout court curfew Private security firm G4S has sacked two members of staff who tagged a man’s false leg, allowing him to remove it and flout a court-imposed curfew. Christopher Lowcock, 29, fooled the two employees by wrapping a prosthetic leg in a bandage when they set up the tag at his home in Rochdale, Greater Manchester. He was then able to remove the limb and break a curfew imposed for offences involving drugs, driving and a weapon. G4S sacked the pair for committing a serious disciplinary offence, it said. In a statement, the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) said procedures “were clearly not followed in this case and G4S have taken action against the staff involved”. “Two thousand offenders are tagged every week and incidents like this are very rare,” a spokesman added. G4S revealed managers became suspicious last month but when they returned to Lowcock’s home he had been returned to custody accused of a driving-related offence. The company revealed the second employee who went to check on the monitoring equipment at Lowcock’s home was also sacked for failing to realise he had fooled them into tagging his false leg. A spokeswoman for the company said it placed electronic tags on “70,000 subjects a year on behalf of the Ministry of Justice”. “Given the critical nature of this service we have very strict procedures in place which all of our staff must follow. “In this individual’s case two employees failed to adhere to the correct procedures when installing the tag. Had they done so, they would have identified his prosthetic leg.” The two staff involved had committed a serious disciplinary offence by failing to follow procedure and had been dismissed, she said. The MoJ said contractors were expected to adhere to “the highest standards of professionalism” and strict guidelines had to be followed when tagging offenders. The company also handles immigration detainees and was involved in the controversial death of Jimmy Mubenga, an Angolan national who was deported from a commercial flight from Heathrow last October. Passengers told the police they saw three G4S security guards heavily restraining Mubenga, who had been complaining of breathing difficulties before he collapsed. Three guards were interviewed by police and released on bail. G4S Helen Carter guardian.co.uk

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Colin Powell fired back at Dick Cheney and his revealing memoir yesterday, calling the former veep’s revelations “cheap shots that he’s taking at me and other members of the administration who served to the best of our ability for President Bush,” reports Politico . In particular, Powell rebutted claims that he…

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