Mr MacAskill will explain his actions to MSPs at Holyrood
Megrahi release ‘right decision’
Bomber release ‘damages Scotland’
Send us your comments
**The Scottish justice secretary will be forced to defend his decision to release the Lockerbie bomber, as the Scottish Parliament is recalled later.**Opposition parties will demand to know how Kenny MacAskill aims to repair the damage they claimed had been done to Scotland’s global reputation.
He has been under huge pressure, after granting early release to terminally-ill Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi.
Mr MacAskill will make a statement to parliament and be questioned by MSPs.
The parliament will reconvene at 1430 BST on Monday.
Megrahi was freed after receiving a life sentence imposed in 2001 for his conviction for the UK’s worst terrorist atrocity, which claimed 270 lives in 1988.
International standing
The 57-year-old, who has prostate cancer, returned home to Libya on Thursday to jubilant scenes which included people waving Scottish flags.
Scottish ministers said their decision to release Megrahi on compassionate grounds - which has been strongly criticised by the US government - followed due process and was the right one.
As the Scottish Parliament was preparing to cut short its summer break to discuss the issue, Scotland’s opposition politicians urged Mr MacAskill to set out how he intends to improve Scotland’s international standing in the wake of the criticism.
They also insisted he must reveal whether any deals were done “behind the scenes” in relation to the early release, and address claims Megrahi was pressurised into his decision to drop the appeal against his conviction.
The Scottish National Party administration has maintained Scotland has a strong relationship with the US, which did not always depend on the two countries coming to agreement.
Ministers said they understood the upset, but were duty-bound to take the right decision in the eyes of the Scottish legal system. US president Barack Obama and FBI boss Robert Mueller have both hit out at Mr MacAskill’s decision.
There has also been an angry reaction from some of the families of the 189 Americans killed in the Lockerbie bombing.
Scotland’s former Labour first minister, Jack McConnell, said the decision was a “grave error of judgment”, although Henry McLeish, who served as a Labour first minister at the time Megrahi was convicted, said Mr MacAskill’s conclusion was the right one.
The Scottish Parliament, which had not been due back in Edinburgh from summer recess until the start of September, has only been recalled on two previous occasions in its 10 year history.
These came following the deaths of former first minister Donald Dewar, in 2000, and the Queen Mother, in 2002.