Safia Aoude

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Safia Aoude journalist, teacher and researcher into the Pan Am Flight 103 disaster

Safia Aoude comes from East Copenhagen (Oesterbro), Denmark. She has a law degree from Copenhagen University 1997. Safia began working in 1998 for FM Legal Aid, for Audiomedia A/S, as well as a part time freelance journalist for her own firm Aoude Media. She does part time teaching at DIA Private School.

Her interests are: philosophy, international law, traveling the world, and learning languages. She speaks Danish, English, Arabic, German, French, Rasta, Jive, Ebonics and Swedish and understands Spanish, Italian, Dutch, Africaans, Jiddish, Swahili, Tamahaq, Maltese and Norwegian. Outdoor sporting activities, Hechler & Koch automatic weapons, aviation history, computer technology, computer games and everything else that catches her eye.

Lockerbie bombing

According to Safia: "Some might think that Pan Am 103 and the Lockerbie bombing trial is taking up all of my time these years. To a certain extent this is true. That is why holidays were invented."[1]

Other interests

2001 My present interest these days is welding with Brown´s Gas generator. If you think welding is boring, you are in for a big surprise. Brown´s gas is made entirely out of hydrogene and oxygene (water), burns with a ridiculous flame temperature of merely 135 celsius and is thus totally harmless if exposed to say the bare skin. But when pointed at metal, say aluminium, it will heat up the temperature of aluminium to more than 1200 celsius. Applyed to a brick, temperatures get up to almost 2000 celsius. Along all this, you can still put your hand into the flame and feel little but some warm sensation. Brown´s gas can even cut iron oxide and works by raising the temperatur of the burning material. Scientists still don´t know how the gas can do that. Try using Brown´s gas on a pice of wood fire brick a few minutes - the brick will be melted down to something like a stone with a hardness of 9.5, which is almost as hard as a diamond. Thanks to wonderful Colin Wilson for directing my mind to this fascinating scientific invention ! Also: currently learning Egyptian hieroglyphs. I am planning to learn ayamara next year, an easy language spoken by people in South America.

Holidays

2000 During virtually all my holidays for the last 3 years, I´ve had another occupation that is as vivid as Pan Am 103 and as intruing as the Lockerbie bombing trial. It made me climbing desert mountains in the worst of summer heat, diving into long forgotten historical archives and to the beautiful bottom of the Red Sea. All for the single purpose of finally uncovering the near atomized remains of some old bones amid desert rock.

I found those bones, all right. I didn´t find them in their final resting place, though. I found them in the genes of people, in the pages of history, in the dust of my own past. The dead should be left alone in their graves. But the ones who put them there, by force and far to early - they should never be left alone. Relatives and friends of victims aboard Pan Am 103 and in Lockerbie might think 12 years is a long time. It isn´t !

For the true seekers of justice, time is but a noun. And a murder is still a murder, even after 70 years of willful oblivion.

References