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Gold/Mining/Energy : Lundin Oil (LOILY, LOILB Sweden) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ISPYOIL who wrote (861)11/26/1998 5:45:00 AM
From: Tomas  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2742
 
Libya: UN sanctions could be suspended within a couple of weeks
Kofi Annan hopes to bring the Lockerbie issue to a close by the end of this month

BBC Thursday, November 26
New hope for Lockerbie trial
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan has hinted
he may visit Libya to help solve the dispute over the trial
of two suspects in the Lockerbie bombing.

After a change in policy in London and Washington
earlier this year, the UN decided sanctions against Libya
could be suspended if the two men were handed over for
trial in the Netherlands rather than Scotland or the US as
originally demanded.

Kofi Annan told reporters he hoped to bring the
issue to a close by the end of this month.
He said he would be in North Africa next week
and that a visit to Libya had not been excluded.


His comments follow weeks of discussions between
Libyan and UN lawyers over the legal details of any
trial for the two men - Abdel Baset al-Megrahi and
Al-Amin Khalifah Fhimah - alleged to be behind the
bombing that killed 270 people in 1988.

The Libyans have been concerned about precisely where
in the Netherlands the trial would take place and where
the two would serve their sentences if found guilty.

Diplomatic sources in New York say the legal issues are
less important than the fundamental political decisions
that ultimately rest with the Libyan leader, Colonel
Gaddafi.

They say he must decide whether the domestic political
risks of handing the two men over outweigh the obvious
international benefits.

The Libyan leader has been under increasing pressure
from his allies in Africa and the Arab world to end the
dispute. Our UN Correspondent Rob Watson says a
personal visit by Mr Annan may provide the perfect
opportunity to do just that.

Top security chiefs 'jailed'
At the same time, there have been reports that three
senior Libyan officials have been tried and jailed in Tripoli
in connection with the bombing.

But exiles in London say this is an attempt by the
Libyan authorities to prevent key witnesses testifying in
any trial of the two men wanted by the US and UK.

The exiles argue that if the officials - who are all
stalwarts of Colonel Gaddafi's government and include
his closest associates - are already behind bars, they
will be unable to be called as witnesses.

Alternatively, the exiles say the convictions could be
used to show London and Washington that Tripoli has
taken its own steps to address the Lockerbie case.

According to the exiles, the three security officials -
Abdullah al-Senussi, Musa Koussa and Muhammad
al-Misrati - were convicted of dereliction of duty and
sentenced to between five and seven years in prison.

There has been no confirmation from Libya, but Libyan
Justice Minister Muhammad al-Zuwiy did not deny the
trials took place.

Western diplomatic sources say that whatever may have
happened, the three are already back behind their
desks.

news.bbc.co.uk