Peter Biddulph

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Person.png Peter Biddulph Facebook TwitterRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Peter Biddulph.jpg
Born27 January 1940
Alma materHull University
Member ofJustice for Megrahi

For the last fifteen years, Peter Biddulph has helped Dr Jim Swire, both in writing his memoir of the Lockerbie bombing, investigation and trial, and with all that has happened since regarding Lockerbie and related matters.

With the assistance of Professor Robert Black, Peter Biddulph developed their blogsite Lockerbietruth.com which has contributed to better public understanding of the issues surrounding Lockerbie.[1]

Thatcher on Lockerbie

On 1 February 2015, Peter Biddulph posted on his Facebook page:

Dr Jim Swire's fight to discover who really murdered his daughter Flora is into its twenty seventh year. It began while computers were just a pipe dream and pretty much all of the current Facebook fraternity were not even a twinkle in their fathers' eyes.

Over the years the truth has emerged, layer by layer. And now the Scottish Crown Office is clearly exposed as clinging to a trial verdict that was based on false information by forensic scientists, the concealment of key evidence by senior police officers, and the bribery of the only identification witness, a Maltese shopkeeper.

Meanwhile the Crown Office call Jim Swire and all who agree with him "conspiracy theorists". They are wrong. Jim has always dealt with facts. He refuses to accept anything that cannot be proved either by original documents and evidence, or the recorded words of those who claim to speak for the law.

Those who support Jim's battle to have the tragedy investigated following a third appeal include famous people around the world. (With apologies to the many I am about to omit). Among them Ms Kate Adie, former Chief Correspondent for BBC News and currently correspondent for CNN; Professor Noam Chomsky, regarded by many as the most important thinker and campaigner for justice alive today; Mr Patrick Haseldine, retired British diplomat; Mr Andrew Kilgore, former US ambassador to Qatar; Mr John Pilger, renowned journalist and campaigner for human rights; Sir Teddy Taylor, Shadow Secretary of State for Scotland; Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Nobel Peace Prize winner.

For the full detail of the campaign see the Facebook page of Justice for Megrahi.

270 people died at Lockerbie on 21st December 1988. It was the greatest peacetime attack on the British mainland since the Second World War.

And yet few people will be aware that Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher refused in her memoirs to even accept that the Lockerbie attack happened.

She maintained that position even under close questioning by former Leader of the House Tam Dalyell. She claimed:

"I did not write about Lockerbie because I know nothing about Lockerbie".

The author Milan Kundera wrote in his novel "The Book of Laughter and Forgetting" that the struggle of man against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting. Jim Swire and those supporting his campaign exemplify that struggle. It will not cease until the truth is revealed.[2]

 

Related Document

TitleTypePublication dateAuthor(s)Description
Document:Fragments of TruthArticle1 December 2009Mark Hirst
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