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Policemen stand near the wreckage of 747 Pan Am airliner that exploded and crashed over Lockerbie, Scotland, 22 December 1988. AFP
Policemen stand near the wreckage of 747 Pan Am airliner that exploded and crashed over Lockerbie, Scotland, 22 December 1988. AFP

1988 - The bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie

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Updated 19 April 2025

1988 - The bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie

1988 - The bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie
  • The Lockerbie bombing, the deadliest terrorist attack in UK history, exposed ignored warnings and left lingering questions

JEDDAH: The king leads the Saudi delegation at a Gulf Cooperation Council summit in Manama, there is a new government in Israel, and there is a crisis in Sudan; that Arab News front page could have been published on almost any day in recent years.聽

Except the Saudi king was King Fahd, the Israeli prime minister was Yitzhak Shamir, and another report on the page tells you that this was Dec. 23, 1988.聽

Two nights before, Pan Am Flight 103 from Frankfurt to Detroit, via London and New York, had been blown up by a terrorist bomb as it crossed the border between England and Scotland.聽

With a death toll of 270 鈥 all 243 passengers and 16 crew, and 11 victims on the ground in Lockerbie, where the aircraft smashed into two residential streets at 800 kph 鈥 it remains the deadliest terror attack in UK history.聽

Few events resonate all the way from a small Scottish border town to the White House. This was one such event. Lockerbie, with its 4,000 souls, joined that list of places in the UK and elsewhere 鈥 Aberfan, Munich, Srebrenica, My Lai 鈥 forever associated in the public consciousness with cruel and senseless loss of life.聽

Scotland, my country, and Glasgow, my city, are not soft places, nor are the journalists they produce noted for emotional incontinence. But I saw tough, cynical, diamond-hard reporters return from Lockerbie numbed into glazed-eyed silence by the enormity of what they saw there, and full of respect and admiration for the quiet dignity and fortitude with which its townspeople bore their losses.聽

How we wrote it




The jet crash headlined Arab News鈥 front page, detailing its devastation in the Scottish town.

Most of the plane鈥檚 passengers were American, and their relatives flew from the US to identify bodies and possessions. The people of Lockerbie temporarily buried their own grief to provide accommodation, food, comfort and solace to the bereaved. Bonds were forged that remain to this day.聽

When a terrorist attack was confirmed, the perpetrator identified by Washington was inevitable. The US and the regime of Muammar Qaddafi in Libya had been in a state of undeclared war for years, and US airstrikes in April 1986, far from cowing Qaddafi, appeared only to have incensed him.聽

US and UK investigators believed Libyan agents in Malta concealed a Semtex bomb inside a radio-cassette player and sent it in a suitcase to Frankfurt, where it was loaded aboard Pan Am Flight 103 and the fate of 270 people was sealed.聽

With some narratives, paradoxically, it can make sense to work backwards 鈥 in this case from when Abdelbaset Al-Megrahi, a Libyan intelligence officer and former head of security for Libyan Arab Airlines, died at his home in Tripoli on May 20, 2012, at the age of 60.聽

More than 11 years earlier, in January 2001, three Scottish judges sitting at a special court in a former US air base in the Netherlands had sentenced Al-Megrahi to life imprisonment on 270 counts of murder for the Lockerbie bombing. He served more than eight years in two prisons in Scotland before the Scottish government released him on compassionate grounds when doctors said he had terminal cancer, and he returned to Libya in August 2009. Given three months to live, he lasted for nearly three years.聽

Al-Megrahi was, and remains, the only person to be convicted of the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103; with his death, therefore, case closed? Well, no.聽

The repercussions began soon after the disaster, and continue to this day. Pan Am, its security operations exposed as criminally useless, was bankrupt after a year and out of business after two. UN sanctions against Qaddafi and Libya reinforced their pariah status, and by February 2011 the country was embroiled in civil war. Qaddafi was captured and killed on Oct. 20, 2011. Al-Megrahi would outlive him by seven months.聽

Key Dates

  • 1

    The US Federal Aviation Authority issues a bulletin warning of an anonymous tip that a Pan Am flight from Frankfurt will be blown up in the next two weeks.

  • 2

    Pan Am Flight 103 is destroyed by a bomb over Lockerbie.

    Timeline Image Dec. 21, 1988

  • 3

    Alleged Libyan intelligence officers Abdelbaset Al-Megrahi and Lamin Khalifa Fhimah are indicted for murder by US and Scottish authorities, but Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi refuses to allow their extradition for trial.

    Timeline Image Nov. 1991

  • 4

    After a nine-year standoff, Qaddafi agrees to allow Al-Megrahi and Fhimah to be tried under Scottish law in the Netherlands.

    Timeline Image May 3, 2000

  • 5

    Al-Megrahi is jailed for life. Fhimah is found not guilty.

  • 6

    Al-Megrahi loses an appeal against his conviction.

  • 7

    Qaddafi accepts Libya鈥檚 responsibility for the bombing and agrees to pay compensation to each of the victims鈥 families.

    Timeline Image April 29, 2003

  • 8

    Al-Megrahi, with terminal prostate cancer diagnosed, is released on compassionate grounds and returns to Libya.

    Timeline Image Aug. 20, 2009

  • 9

    Libyan civil war breaks out.

  • 10

    Libya鈥檚 former Justice Minister Mustafa Abdul Jalil claims Qaddafi鈥檚 regime was implicated in the bombing.

    Timeline Image Feb. 23, 2011

  • 11

    Qaddafi is killed by rebel militia while trying to flee after the fall of Tripoli.

  • 12

    Al-Megrahi dies, aged 60.

  • 13

    The US announces the arrest of Abu Agila Masud, accused of constructing the bomb device that destroyed Pan Am Flight 103.

    Timeline Image Dec. 12, 2022

For the rest of us, airline and airport security have intensified on an apparently endless upward trajectory, and we can at least be grateful that an unaccompanied suitcase with a bomb inside can never again travel from Malta through two airports to the skies over Scotland.聽

Perhaps most significantly, however, Lockerbie may have marked the beginning of a collapse in public trust in what our governments tell us. Authorities in the US and the UK have always insisted that Al-Megrahi was guilty, and that he acted alone or with a single accomplice. Few believe that.聽

Major world events 鈥 the assassination of John F. Kennedy, the moon landings, the 9/11 attacks on America 鈥 attract conspiracy theorists like iron to a magnet, and Lockerbie is no exception. It was Iran; it was the Palestinians; it was Mossad; it was the Stasi; it was apartheid South Africa.聽

What makes Lockerbie different is that one of the 鈥渢heories鈥 is almost certainly fact 鈥 but which one is anyone鈥檚 guess. One man more entitled than most to make that guess is Jim Swire, the softly spoken but determined English country doctor whose daughter Flora, 23, perished on board the plane.聽

Swire, now in his late eighties, has devoted his life to finding the truth about Lockerbie. He met and questioned Al-Megrahi. He met and questioned Qaddafi. He has been a thorn in the side of UK and US authorities for more than 30 years, and he believes to this day that the case against Al-Megrahi was a travesty and a tissue of lies, to cover up some ghastly truth that may never be known.聽

US President George H. W. Bush set up an aviation security commission in September 1989 to report on the plane鈥檚 sabotage, and British relatives of the victims met members of the commission at the US Embassy in London in February the following year. A member of Bush鈥檚 staff told one of the relatives: 鈥淵our government and ours know exactly what happened, but they are never going to tell.鈥澛




Local resident Robert Love stands by one of the four engines of the ill-fated Pan Am 747 Jumbo jet that exploded and crashed on route to New-York. AFP

Perhaps not. But like a tenacious shoot from a seed buried deep beneath the soil, the truth has a way of reaching the light.聽

This year the production of two television drama series, one focused on Swire鈥檚 dogged search for that truth, has brought the Lockerbie tragedy back into the public consciousness. Old theories are being revived.聽

But this year could also see those theories refuted 鈥 or vindicated.聽

On May 12, a man identified in court papers as Abu Agila Mohammad Masud Kheir Al-Marimi, or simply Masud, will go on trial in Washington charged with having made the bomb that destroyed Pan Am Flight 103.聽

The story of how Masud was identified, captured and extradited to the US 鈥 a country with which Libya has no extradition treaty 鈥 remains to be told.聽

It also remains to be seen whether the trial of Masud will bring some kind of closure, or simply further distress, for the still-grieving families of the victims of Pan Am Flight 103, and for the people of Lockerbie.

  • Ross Anderson, associate editor at Arab News, was on duty as a senior editor at Today newspaper in London on the night of the Lockerbie disaster.


Trump says can broker Iran鈥慖srael peace using trade as he did with India鈥慞akistan

Trump says can broker Iran鈥慖srael peace using trade as he did with India鈥慞akistan
Updated 7 min 4 sec ago

Trump says can broker Iran鈥慖srael peace using trade as he did with India鈥慞akistan

Trump says can broker Iran鈥慖srael peace using trade as he did with India鈥慞akistan
  • Trump鈥檚 reference to India and Pakistan pertains to military confrontation which ended with US-facilitated ceasefire on May 10
  • Iranian officials report at least 138 people have been killed in Israel鈥檚 military onslaught since Friday, including 60 on Saturday

ISLAMABAD: US President Donald Trump said on Sunday he could use American trade leverage to broker a peace deal between Iran and Israel, drawing a parallel to his administration鈥檚 role in facilitating a ceasefire between India and Pakistan last month.

The renewed conflict saw Iran and Israel exchanging missile and drone strikes over the past three days.

Iranian officials report at least 138 people have been killed in Israel鈥檚 onslaught since Friday, including 60 on Saturday, half of them children, when a missile brought down a 14-story apartment block in Tehran. Israel has reported at least 13 deaths.

鈥淚ran and Israel should make a deal, and will make a deal, just like I got India and Pakistan to make,鈥 Trump wrote on Truth Social. 鈥淚n that case by using TRADE with the United States to bring reason, cohesion, and sanity into the talks with two excellent leaders who were able to quickly make a decision and STOP!鈥

Trump鈥檚 reference to India and Pakistan pertains to a brief military confrontation between the nuclear-armed neighbors in May, which ended with a US-facilitated ceasefire on May 10. Washington said trade and security assurances were key to the de-escalation.

He also cited other conflicts, between Serbia and Kosovo, and disputes over the Nile dam involving Egypt and Ethiopia, saying his interventions helped maintain peace 鈥渁t least for now.鈥

鈥淟ikewise, we will have PEACE, soon, between Israel and Iran!鈥 Trump added. 鈥淢any calls and meetings now taking place.鈥

Since Friday, Pakistan鈥檚 government has repeatedly pledged solidarity with Iran but urged its citizens to postpone travel to Iran and Iraq until the security situation improves. 

On Saturday, Islamabad issued a formal travel advisory asking Pakistanis to avoid travel to Iran 鈥渇or a limited period鈥 due to the Israeli attacks.

Pakistan has also condemned the Israeli strikes, calling them an unjustified violation of Iranian sovereignty, and has urged the international community to help de-escalate tensions through dialogue.


Turkish president discusses Israel-Iran strikes with Oman鈥檚 sultan, Kuwait鈥檚 emir

Turkish president discusses Israel-Iran strikes with Oman鈥檚 sultan, Kuwait鈥檚 emir
Updated 13 min 39 sec ago

Turkish president discusses Israel-Iran strikes with Oman鈥檚 sultan, Kuwait鈥檚 emir

Turkish president discusses Israel-Iran strikes with Oman鈥檚 sultan, Kuwait鈥檚 emir
  • Leaders stress importance of de-escalation, halting aggression, resolving differences through diplomatic means

LONDON: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan discussed developments in the Middle East during separate phone calls on Sunday with the Sultan of Oman Haitham bin Tariq, and the Emir of Kuwait Sheikh Meshal Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah.

Erdogan discussed with the Omani sultan the Israeli strikes against Iran, which began on Friday morning, and their 鈥渨orrying repercussions鈥 for the region, the Oman News Agency reported.

The parties stressed the importance of dialogue and diplomacy and a return to the negotiating table to settle conflicts and prevent the escalation of crises in the region.

The ONA reported that they exchanged views on maintaining security and stability in accordance with international law.

Erdogan and the Emir of Kuwait Sheikh Meshal also discussed the rapid developments in the Middle East and the conflict between 鈥渢he friendly Islamic Republic of Iran and the brutal Israeli entity,鈥 the Kuwait News Agency reported.

In addition, both leaders renewed their condemnation of the ongoing Israeli strikes in the Gaza Strip, where at least 54,000 Palestinians have been killed since late 2023. They emphasized the importance of de-escalating tensions, halting aggression, and resolving differences through diplomatic means in the region, the KUNA added.


MP calls out lack of bomb shelters in Arab-Israeli communities

MP calls out lack of bomb shelters in Arab-Israeli communities
Updated 29 min 52 sec ago

MP calls out lack of bomb shelters in Arab-Israeli communities

MP calls out lack of bomb shelters in Arab-Israeli communities
JERUSALEM: Ayman Odeh, an Israeli member of parliament of Palestinian descent, accused the government on Sunday of failing to provide Arab-Israeli communities with enough shelters after an Iranian missile killed four people in the city of Tamra.
鈥淭he state, unfortunately, still distinguishes between blood and blood,鈥 Odeh lamented on X, after touring the city of 37,000 predominantly Arab residents.
A house there was destroyed by a missile launched by Iran overnight in response to Israel鈥檚 unprecedented attacks on the Islamic republic鈥檚 military and nuclear sites.
鈥淔our civilians were killed yesterday: Manar Al-Qassem Abu Al-Hija Khatib (39), her two daughters Hala (13) and Shada (20), and their relative Manar Diab Khatib (41),鈥 Odeh said, adding that 鈥渄ozens more鈥 were wounded.
Cars and buildings were also damaged by the strike on the community in the Israeli region of Galilee, an AFP journalist at the scene reported.
鈥淭amra is not a village. It is a city without public shelters,鈥 Odeh said, adding that this was the case for 60 percent of 鈥渓ocal authorities鈥 鈥 the Israeli term for communities not officially registered as cities, many of which are Arab-Israeli.
Arab-Israelis are Palestinians who remained in what is now Israel after its creation in 1948, and represent about 20 percent of the country鈥檚 population.
The community frequently professes to face discrimination from Israel鈥檚 Jewish majority.
With Israel and Iran engaged in their most intense confrontation ever, Odeh, a communist MP for over 10 years, warned of 鈥渁 threat of unprecedented destruction (that) will not distinguish鈥 between Arabs and Jews.
He also accused the government of 鈥渘eglect鈥 toward citizens of Palestinian descent.
A video shared on social media Sunday night caused outrage after showing families apparently rejoicing in Hebrew as missiles fell on Tamra.
In some Arab neighborhoods, missiles launched toward Israel have also been welcomed with joy, AFP journalists reported.

Air India crash death toll climbs to 270 as victim identification continues

Air India crash death toll climbs to 270 as victim identification continues
Updated 36 min 13 sec ago

Air India crash death toll climbs to 270 as victim identification continues

Air India crash death toll climbs to 270 as victim identification continues
  • Only one of 242 people on London-bound flight survived
  • Doctors have identified 32 individuals through DNA matching

NEW DELHI: The death toll from the crash of an Air India flight from Ahmedabad to London has risen to 270, as bodies, including those of people killed on the ground, continue to be identified.

The Boeing 787 Dreamliner crashed less than a minute after takeoff from Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport in Gujarat state on Thursday.

It was carrying 242 people 鈥 230 passengers, two pilots and 10 crew members. Only one person, a British national sitting in an emergency exit seat, survived the crash.

It remains unclear how many people were killed on the ground as the aircraft fell on B.J. Medical College and a hostel for students and resident doctors of the Ahmedabad Civil Hospital.

Dr. Dhaval Gameti, president of the Junior Doctors鈥 Association at the college, told The Associated Press on Saturday that the hospital had received the bodies of 270 victims.

The process of matching DNA samples to confirm their identities is underway.

Dr. Rajnish Patel, additional superintendent at the hospital, told the media on Sunday that only 14 bodies had been handed over to their next of kin.

鈥淚n the Ahmedabad plane tragedy, the DNA samples of 32 deceased individuals have been matched,鈥 the hospital said in a statement.

鈥淭he mortal remains of the deceased whose DNA samples have been matched are being respectfully handed over to their families.鈥

Dr. Sarbari Dutta, secretary general of the Indian Medical Association, told Arab News that at least four medical students were confirmed to have been killed when the plane crashed into the college compound.

鈥淢ore than 20 students are admitted in the hospital, some of them with very severe injuries,鈥 she said, adding that the actual number of casualties would 鈥渄efinitely鈥 be higher.

India鈥檚 Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau is leading the inquiry into the cause of the crash.

Civil Aviation Minister Ram Mohan Naidu Kinjarapu said on Saturday, after the aircraft鈥檚 digital flight data recorder, or black box, had been found at the site of the crash, that an investigation report would be issued within three months.

鈥淭he Directorate General of Civil Aviation has also given an order to do extended surveillance for the (Boeing) 787 planes,鈥 he said.

鈥淭here are 34 in our Indian aircraft fleet today. I believe that eight have already been inspected and with immediate urgency. All of them are going to be done.鈥


ACWA Power advances $1.8bn capital increase plan to boost global expansion, says CFO鈥

ACWA Power advances $1.8bn capital increase plan to boost global expansion, says CFO鈥
Updated 38 min 34 sec ago

ACWA Power advances $1.8bn capital increase plan to boost global expansion, says CFO鈥

ACWA Power advances $1.8bn capital increase plan to boost global expansion, says CFO鈥

RIYADH: Saudi utility giant ACWA Power is moving forward with its SR7 billion ($1.8 billion) capital increase as part of a broader strategy to expand its footprint in energy transformation, water desalination, and green hydrogen production, according to its chief financial officer.

In an interview with Al-Ekhbariya, Abdulhameed Al-Muhaidib described the capital raise as a critical step to reinforce the company鈥檚 leadership both domestically and internationally in sustainable infrastructure.

ACWA Power鈥檚 investment portfolio currently stands at around SR400 billion, encompassing over 78 gigawatts of production capacity and more than 9.5 million cubic meters per day in water desalination capacity. In line with long-term objectives, the company鈥檚 board approved a plan two years ago to triple assets under management to over SR937.5 billion by 2030.

The initiative also aligns with 黑料社区鈥檚 national goal of achieving a balanced energy mix by 2030, targeting an equal split between gas and renewable sources for electricity generation.

鈥淭he company decided to increase its capital through a rights issue rather than expanding into debt markets, with the aim of strengthening its financial position and enhancing credit flexibility. A large portion of the proceeds will be used to expand its project portfolio both inside and outside the Kingdom,鈥 said Al-Muhaidib.

He noted that 60 percent of ACWA Power鈥檚 current investments are located in the Kingdom, with the remaining 40 percent spread across international markets. Between 75 percent and 85 percent of the new capital will be allocated to greenfield projects, while acquisitions will account for no more than 20 percent.

鈥淎CWA Power鈥檚 infrastructure projects rely primarily on debt, with shareholders鈥 equity covering 20 percent to 25 percent of the financing structure. The company will continue this financing strategy while maintaining net debt at approximately SR20 billion, despite the significant growth expected through 2030,鈥 he added.

Highlighting the company鈥檚 geographical expansion, Al-Muhaidib said ACWA Power added new projects worth SR34 billion in 2024 across 黑料社区, Egypt, Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan, and China.

He also pointed out the firm鈥檚 active presence in China, with more than 90 employees based in its Shanghai office to support growth in that market.

ACWA Power successfully achieved nine financial closings in 2024, amounting to SR34.6 billion. The CFO said a dedicated internal team has been established to streamline project execution from inception to operation.

He confirmed that the Capital Market Authority has approved the capital increase, with the final offering price set to be announced during the company鈥檚 general assembly on June 30.

鈥淪eventy-seven percent of shareholders have submitted their subscription pledges,鈥 Al-Muhaidib noted, adding that the high participation rate underscores investor confidence in the company鈥檚 long-term strategy.

ACWA Power reported a net profit of SR1.75 billion in 2024, a 5.74 percent increase year on year, according to a Tadawul filing issued in February. The gain was attributed to higher revenues from operations and maintenance, increased electricity sales, and improved earnings from equity-accounted investees, capital recycling, and net finance income.