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Floral tributes are pictured at a service to mark the 30th anniversary of the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, at the Memorial Garden, Dryfesdale Cemetery, in Lockerbie. Photo: AFP

Britain and the US mark 30 years since the Lockerbie bombing

  • All 259 people on board Pan Am Flight 103 were killed when it exploded over the Scottish town in 1988
Britain

Britain and the US will hold memorial services on Friday to remember the 270 people killed when a US airliner exploded over the Scottish town of Lockerbie 30 years ago, in Britain’s worst ever attack.

Pan Am Flight 103 blew up on December 21, 1988, on its way from London to New York. All 259 people on board – most of them Americans heading home for the holidays – were killed as well as 11 people on the ground.

Wreaths were laid in the town’s memorial garden and a message from Queen Elizabeth was read out.

“I send my prayers and good wishes to all those who will be marking this solemn anniversary,” the message said.

Mark Kirkpatrick, caretaker for Lockerbie Townhall, is seen looking at the stained glass window tribute to the victims of Pan Am flight 103 bombing, Lockerbie, Scotland. Photo: AP

Of the victims, 35 were from Syracuse University in New York, where a memorial will be held on Friday.

Other US services will be held at Arlington National Cemetery and FBI headquarters.

The plane exploded after a bomb stored in a suitcase in the hold was detonated.

Only one person has ever been convicted in connection with the bombing – Libyan Abdelbaset Ali Mohmet al-Megrahi, who died in 2012 still protesting his innocence.

His lawyer Aamer Anwar issued a statement on Thursday claiming there had been a miscarriage of justice, saying the “finger of blame has long been pointed in the direction of Iran” for ordering the attack.

Local MP David Mundell said victims had still not received full justice.

Carisa Harris-Adamson, from San Francisco, lays a wreath in memory of her uncle John Cummock, who was on the flight, during a service on Friday at the Memorial Garden in Dryfesdale Cemetery, on the morning of the 30th anniversary of the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103. Photo: Reuters

“It has not been easy, nor have we been able to achieve the closure we would have wanted, even after 30 years,” he said.

“However, throughout, the people in Lockerbie have retained their dignity and stoicism, and offered friendship and support to those who lost loved ones.”

Libya admitted responsibility for the bombing in 2003 and the regime of slain dictator Moamer Kadhafi eventually paid US$2.7 billion in compensation to victims’ families as part of a raft of measures aimed at a rapprochement with the West.

Since the fall of Kadhafi in 2011, British and US detectives have travelled to Libya to investigate whether other perpetrators could be identified.

A Scottish commission responsible for investigating miscarriages of justice said earlier this year that it would review Megrahi’s conviction.

He abandoned his appeal in 2009 when he was released from a Scottish prison on compassionate grounds after a diagnosis of terminal prostate cancer, but his family asked for the case to be reviewed.

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