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Lockerbie bomb anniversary marked

{ Published on   21 December 2008  }

For San Francisco readers keeping up-to-date on world news, we are pleased to present this story from The BBC.

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Relatives of the 270 people killed in the Lockerbie bombing have been marking the 20th anniversary of the tragedy.

Pan Am Flight 103 was blown up over the town on 21 December 1988, claiming the lives of everyone on the plane and 11 local residents on the ground.

A number of “low key” ceremonies are taking place in the town in accordance with the wishes of the community.

A tribute is also planned in the US at the Lockerbie memorial in the Arlington National Cemetery in Washington DC.

Special “places to remember” were opened in Lockerbie, with a wreath-laying ceremony taking place at the Dryfesdale Cemetery.

In the evening services took place at both the Tundergarth and Dryfesdale Church.

"You realise just how lucky we are to have had another 20 years of life"
Maxwell Kerr
Eyewitness

‘Nothing will ever change the pain’

‘The world is missing something’

‘Ribbons marked where bodies lay’

A little after 1900 GMT the exact anniversary of the atrocity was remembered.

Earlier, one of the commemorations was held in the Garden of Remembrance, which has been built on the area where the plane came down in Lockerbie.

The US consul in Edinburgh, Lisa Vickers, attended the ceremony.

She said: “There were 180 people that were American citizens on board that flight, 35 of them students at Syracuse University and we still remember very much the events of that night 20 years ago.”

Up to 300 people, including relatives and some former employees of the Pan Am airline are attending a private memorial at Heathrow Airport chapel led by the Rev John Mosey, whose daughter Helga died in the disaster.

For many who lived through it, the memories remain fresh despite the time which has passed.

George Stobbs, Lockerbie’s police inspector at the time, recalls the events of 20 years ago with great clarity.

“Nobody actually knew what had happened, we realised an aircraft had come down but I thought it was a military aircraft,” he said.

“Once I got into Sherwood Crescent I could see flames along the roadside, the footpaths were burst and there were gas pipes fractured – there were dancing flames coming up from them.

“Hedges were on fire, drop pipes on the side of houses were on fire and they were in turn climbing up and setting fire to the roofs.”

It was only later in the evening that the scale of the death toll at Lockerbie began to emerge.

The town has moved on in the intervening years, but Mr Kerr said it was right that it should mark a major anniversary.

Lockerbie nose coneEyewitness Maxwell Kerr said: “You realise just how lucky we are to have had another 20 years of life.”

“These people who died – that was it snuffed out in one second. I think you have never to forget this, it is too big an event, it is too big a disaster.”

Paying tribute, First Minister Alex Salmond said: “I know that through the events being organised in Lockerbie, at Syracuse University, and at other locations in the UK and the US, that fitting tribute will be paid to those who so tragically lost their lives and those, in south of Scotland and beyond, whose lives have been affected by the atrocity.”

He added “I offer my support to all involved in marking the anniversary and, in particular, my condolences to those who will be mourning the loss of a loved one.”

Jim Murphy, Secretary of State for Scotland, said: “Our eternal sympathy goes out to all those who lost family members and friends and who to this day feel the dreadful effects of that terrible event.”

Former Libyan intelligence officer Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed Al Megrahi was found guilty of mass murder following a trial at Camp Zeist in the Netherlands in 2001.

Megrahi, who was recently diagnosed with terminal prostate cancer, has consistently denied responsibility for the bombing and a second appeal against his conviction will be heard by the courts next year


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation



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