Colin Firth’s new Lockerbie tragedy TV drama has sparked concern among victimsâ families over how it could impact a trial of the alleged bombmaker.
Oscar-winning Firth plays the campaigning dad of a young woman who was one of 270 people killed in the UKâs deadliest terror attack. But Skyâs production airing tomorrow about the 1988 bombing of New York-bound Pan AM 103 has sparked fears over focusing on Dr Jim Swire.
The 88-year-oldâs theory on who is to blame for the atrocity is at odds with some of those bereaved. And concern has been raised over the potential influence the show could play in the upcoming trial over one of those blamed. The five-part series comes in the wake of last yearâs Post Office scandal drama on ITV, which prompted widespread outrage of the miscarriage of justice by highlighting Sir Alan Batesâ campaign.
A bereaved dad said of the Lockerbie programme: âIt is only a drama and is their version of what they like to believe happened. But it is a theory I donât agree with at all. My concern is the influence this could have on the trial if we only hear his version of events. I would be deeply concerned about that.â
A bomb went off in the hold of the Boeing 747 jet just 38 minutes after taking off from Londonâs Heathrow on 21 December 1988, killing all 259 onboard and a further 11 on the ground in the Scottish town. Some 43 UK and 190 US citizens were among the 270 who perished â the youngest of whom was only two-months old.
Ex-Libyan intelligence officer Abdelbaset al-Megrahiâs 2001 conviction over the atrocity has been a source of contention for some. Dr Swireâs hunt for justice is played out in the series, Lockerbie: A Search for Truth. The Sky drama is based on the book, Lockerbie: A Father’s Search for Justice, which the campaigner co-authored.
Megrahi â who Dr Swire believes was wrongly accused â died in 2012 in Libya after being released from Scottish prison in 2009 on compassionate grounds after being diagnosed with cancer. He had protested his innocence. Libyan Abu Agila Masud, 71, accused of making the bomb, was due to stand trial in Washington in May but proceedings are said to have been delayed by up to 120 days over a medical condition. Masud has denied charges.
But Dr Swire thinks the bombing was carried out by a Syrian-backed group, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine General Command, in retaliation for the shooting down of an Iranian airliner by a US warship earlier in 1988. However, Paul Hudson, who lost daughter Melina in the tragedy when she was just 16, said he had met Dr Swire several times and âprofoundly disagreedâ with his âtheoriesâ.
Melina was returning home for holidays after spending a semester at Exeter School as part of an exchange. Mr Hudson â who now lives in Florida but was at the time based in Albany, New York â hopes the drama does not influence the jury of the upcoming trial. Mr Hudson, on the board of the Pan AM 103 Lockerbie Legacy Foundation and who has only seen trailers for the drama, said: âThe timing feels coincidental before the trial here. I hope it doesnât do anything to influence the jury pool.
âIf it creates serious doubts that Libya was innocent this person [Masud] may end up not being convicted. They have got an A-list actor who won’t have come cheap to play Jim Swire. I am sure it will be very popular because of this⦠It is only a drama and is their version of what they like to believe happened. But it is a theory I donât agree with at all. My concern is the influence this could have on the trial if we only hear his version of events. I would be deeply concerned about that.â
Meanwhile, Victoria Cummick, whose husband John died in the bombing, has accused programme makers of trying to âinfluence uninformed audiencesâ and âinstil doubt in potential jurorsâ. The widow, who regularly visits her late husbandâs grave in a Lockerbie cemetery, told the Sun: âI feel that the casting of Colin Firth, depicted as the lone, courageous champion of truth and justice, will elevate Swireâs story, filled with unproven conspiracy theories and politically biased interpretations.â
Michelle Ciulla Lipkin, a spokesman for Victims Of Pan Am Flight 103, whose father Frank Ciulla was killed in the attack, told The Mail on Sunday earlier this year: “We have raised our concerns with the producers of the project. We feel they are amplifying and highlighting a false narrative about the bombing, a narrative that the great majority of us who lost loved ones do not align with and have fought very hard against. By focusing on the story of one family, they are denying the story of so many of us.”
Executive producer of the Sky drama, Gareth Neame, said: âItâs very important to point out that Jimâs belief that there was a miscarriage of justice isnât the sole belief, and we hope our drama shows that Jim Swireâs opinion has been challenged over the years. Jim Swire has always believed that there was a miscarriage of justice in the Scottish legal proceedings at the trial in the Netherlands, and that Megrahi was innocent.
âThat is his opinion and itâs an opinion shared by many other people, but it is not shared by everyone. We acknowledge that there are many families who hold a completely different opinion. So as a drama, weâve endeavoured to show that by never saying whether Jimâs version of events is correct or not. Thereâs a lot of evidence to say that it might be, but equally, thereâs contradictory evidence as well. We are telling Jimâs story from his perspective.â
Firth, who earned a best actor Academy Award for his role in The Kingâs Speech, admitted he did not âknow very much about Jim Swire beforehandâ. But the acclaimed star, who has met Dr Swire, said: âI was just overwhelmed by the relentless sadness of his journey. The twists and turns of it; and revisiting what I thought I knew about the trial, about the investigation and all of the subsequent events. I thought it was the most remarkable story, a painful one, but also in many ways an impressive one. I thought that if you go through the steps that that man has been through, it was very much a story worth telling.â
Dr Swire, whose daughter Flora was just shy of her 24th birthday when killed, thinks Megrahi was a wronged man. The campaigner, who lives in Chipping Campden in the Cotswolds, explained: âMy belief is that UK and US governments lied about the way this was carried out. Over the years as the UK families group, all that we have done is try to go behind the scenes to make up our own minds.â
A Sky spokesperson said: âLockerbie: A Search for Truth is based on Dr Jim Swire and Peter Biddulphâs book âThe Lockerbie Bombing: A Fatherâs Search for Justiceâ and is anchored in the personal story of Dr Jim and Jane Swire. We understand there are opposing opinions and do not attempt to tell the definitive version of the Lockerbie disaster or present a conclusion. We do not underestimate the responsibility of telling this story sensitively. We engaged with victimsâ families and support groups throughout production and in the lead up to the series launch.â
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