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ABU NIDAL CONFESSED TO BOMBING, SAYS FORMER AIDE

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by U.N. Wire

Abu Nidal, A Gun for Hire, by Patrick Seale
Trail of the Octopus:  From Beirut to Lockerbie -- Inside the DIA, by Donald Goddard with Lester K. Coleman
The Maltese Double Cross, directed by Allan Francovich -- Illustrated Screenplay & Screencap Gallery
Spy vs. Spy:  Pan Am 103 -- To be Onboard Was Not to Be Onboard, by Charles Carreon

Friday, August 23, 2002

A former member of Abu Nidal's Fatah-Revolutionary Council said in an interview published today that the deceased Palestinian militant had admitted responsibility for the 1988 bombing of a passenger jet over Lockerbie, Scotland.

Sometime before his reported suicide last week, Abu Nidal told a small group of colleagues that his organization had conducted the terrorist attack, according to Atef Abu Bakr, who defected from the Fatah-Revolutionary Council in late 1989. Abu Bakr made the comments in an interview with al-Hayat, an Arabic daily based in London, conducted before Abu Nidal's death.

"I will tell you something very important and serious," Abu Bakr quotes Abu Nidal as saying. "The reports which link the Lockerbie act to others are false reports. We are behind what happened." He added that Abu Nidal threatened death to anyone caught leaking the information.

Abu Bakr's allegation prompted British Member of Parliament Tam Dalyell to call for an investigation of the claim in light of the conviction of Libyan Abdel Basset Ali al-Megrahi for the attack. "If he has said no one else had anything to do with it, where does that leave Mr. al-Megrahi?" Dalyell asked. "I believe the Libyans had nothing to do with it. This is one hell of a thing," he said. "If these allegations are true, they blow everything relating to Lockerbie out of the water, including the trial in Holland" (Nicholas Pyke, London Guardian, Aug. 23).


Aide says Nidal confessed to Lockerbie bombing

Nicholas Pyke
The Guardian, Friday 23 August 2002 02.20 BST

The Palestinian terrorist Abu Nidal admitted to a meeting of his most trusted colleagues that he was behind the 1988 Lockerbie plane bombing and the culprits were not Libyans, it is claimed today in a leading Arabic newspaper.

In an interview with the London daily, Al-Hayat, a former colleague, Atef Abu Bakr, says Nidal made the confession to the inner circle of his revolutionary council some time before his death earlier this week.

Bakr, once a politburo member of Nidal's Fatah-Revolutionary Council, told the paper that Nidal had said: "I will tell you something very important and serious. The reports which link the Lockerbie act to others are false reports. We are behind what happened."

According to Bakr, Nidal threatened anyone who leaked what he said with death, "even if he is in the arms of his wife".

Last night a spokesman for Al Hayat confirmed that the interview with Bakr was conducted some time before Nidal's death.

The Lockerbie disaster happened when a New York-bound Pan Am plane blew up over the town in Scotland, in December 1988, killing 259 passengers and crew, and 11 local residents. A Scottish court sitting in Holland convicted a former Libyan agent, Abdel Basset al-Megrahi, over the bombing and in January 2001 gave him a life sentence.

The group led by Nidal, once one of the world's most wanted men, has been blamed for a series of horrific attacks in the 1970s and 1980s.

The Iraqi authorities have claimed that Nidal, found dead in his Baghdad apartment, committed suicide. Members of the Fatah-Revolutionary Council, better known as the Abu Nidal organisation, said he committed suicide as he was suffering from cancer.

Nidal set up his headquarters in the Libyan capital, Tripoli, in 1987. He was put under house arrest when Libya's leader, Muammar Gaddafi, came under pressure to crack down on militants after the Lockerbie bombing.

Bakr and another dissident split from Nidal's group in late 1989, almost a year after the bombing. After the attack, Bakr was quoted as extending condolences to victims on behalf of Nidal's group.

Tam Dalyell, Labour MP for Linlithgow, has long maintained that Nidal was to blame, and not Libyans. Last night he said: "If true, this is a hugely important development. If he has said that no one else had anything to do with it, where does that leave Mr al-Megrahi? I believe the Libyans had nothing to do with it. This is one hell of a thing."

He said that the Foreign Office must now investigate Bakr's claims "as a matter of the utmost urgency".

He added: "If these allegations are true they blow everything relating to Lockerbie out of the water, including the trial in Holland."
 

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