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Robert said:That last one's the same link I posted earlier. ;-)
Then this thread is starting to eat itself. ... cannibal thread!!!!
Robert said:That last one's the same link I posted earlier. ;-)
Robert said:That last one's the same link I posted earlier. ;-)
Saif al-Islam, the most influential son of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, said Megrahi's return was more important than reclaiming the £1.35bn Libya agreed to pay in compensation for the terrorist atrocity.
However, it was unclear last night whether al-Islam, one of the key players behind normalising Libya's relationship with the West, was referring to the alleged negotiations on prisoner transfer between Britain and Libya before Tony Blair's exit as Prime Minister.
advertisementIn an interview conducted with Reuters news agency during a visit to France, al-Islam said: "The top of our priority is the return of al Megrahi and not the return of the money because I think he is more important than the money."
Al-Islam, 35, who runs a charitable foundation involved in Libya's long efforts to end its international isolation, added: "We are confident one day it will be proved to the world that we had nothing to do with Lockerbie."
Saif al-Islam, the most influential son of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, said Megrahi's return was more important than reclaiming the £1.35bn Libya agreed to pay in compensation for the terrorist atrocity.
However, it was unclear last night whether al-Islam, one of the key players behind normalising Libya's relationship with the West, was referring to the alleged negotiations on prisoner transfer between Britain and Libya before Tony Blair's exit as Prime Minister.
advertisementIn an interview conducted with Reuters news agency during a visit to France, al-Islam said: "The top of our priority is the return of al Megrahi and not the return of the money because I think he is more important than the money."
Al-Islam, 35, who runs a charitable foundation involved in Libya's long efforts to end its international isolation, added: "We are confident one day it will be proved to the world that we had nothing to do with Lockerbie."
Saif al-Islam, the most influential son of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, said Megrahi's return was more important than reclaiming the £1.35bn Libya agreed to pay in compensation for the terrorist atrocity.
However, it was unclear last night whether al-Islam, one of the key players behind normalising Libya's relationship with the West, was referring to the alleged negotiations on prisoner transfer between Britain and Libya before Tony Blair's exit as Prime Minister.
advertisementIn an interview conducted with Reuters news agency during a visit to France, al-Islam said: "The top of our priority is the return of al Megrahi and not the return of the money because I think he is more important than the money."
Al-Islam, 35, who runs a charitable foundation involved in Libya's long efforts to end its international isolation, added: "We are confident one day it will be proved to the world that we had nothing to do with Lockerbie."
Saif al-Islam, the most influential son of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, said Megrahi's return was more important than reclaiming the £1.35bn Libya agreed to pay in compensation for the terrorist atrocity.
However, it was unclear last night whether al-Islam, one of the key players behind normalising Libya's relationship with the West, was referring to the alleged negotiations on prisoner transfer between Britain and Libya before Tony Blair's exit as Prime Minister.
advertisementIn an interview conducted with Reuters news agency during a visit to France, al-Islam said: "The top of our priority is the return of al Megrahi and not the return of the money because I think he is more important than the money."
Al-Islam, 35, who runs a charitable foundation involved in Libya's long efforts to end its international isolation, added: "We are confident one day it will be proved to the world that we had nothing to do with Lockerbie."
Saif al-Islam, the most influential son of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, said Megrahi's return was more important than reclaiming the £1.35bn Libya agreed to pay in compensation for the terrorist atrocity.
However, it was unclear last night whether al-Islam, one of the key players behind normalising Libya's relationship with the West, was referring to the alleged negotiations on prisoner transfer between Britain and Libya before Tony Blair's exit as Prime Minister.
advertisementIn an interview conducted with Reuters news agency during a visit to France, al-Islam said: "The top of our priority is the return of al Megrahi and not the return of the money because I think he is more important than the money."
Al-Islam, 35, who runs a charitable foundation involved in Libya's long efforts to end its international isolation, added: "We are confident one day it will be proved to the world that we had nothing to do with Lockerbie."
Saif al-Islam, the most influential son of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, said Megrahi's return was more important than reclaiming the £1.35bn Libya agreed to pay in compensation for the terrorist atrocity.
However, it was unclear last night whether al-Islam, one of the key players behind normalising Libya's relationship with the West, was referring to the alleged negotiations on prisoner transfer between Britain and Libya before Tony Blair's exit as Prime Minister.
advertisementIn an interview conducted with Reuters news agency during a visit to France, al-Islam said: "The top of our priority is the return of al Megrahi and not the return of the money because I think he is more important than the money."
Al-Islam, 35, who runs a charitable foundation involved in Libya's long efforts to end its international isolation, added: "We are confident one day it will be proved to the world that we had nothing to do with Lockerbie."