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Services are being held at a number of venues to mark the events in the town of Lockerbie 25 years ago |
Memorial services are to
be held in the UK and the US to mark the 25th anniversary of the
Lockerbie bombing in which 270 people were killed.
A wreath-laying and church service will be held in the south
of Scotland town which was devastated when Pan Am flight 103 was blown
from the skies in 1988.
A remembrance service is also being staged at Westminster Abbey in London.
In the US, a ceremony will take place at the memorial cairn in Arlington National Cemetery, near Washington DC.
The Lockerbie bombing remains the deadliest act of terrorism
ever committed in the UK and until the attacks of 9/11 it was also
responsible for the biggest single loss of American lives in such an
attack.
The Boeing 747 was just over half an hour into its flight
from London to New York when it exploded, seconds before 19:03 UK time,
on 21 December 1988.
Memorial cairn
All 243 passengers and 16 crew died, and a further 11 people
were killed in their homes when wreckage hit the ground in Lockerbie.
The majority of the passengers and crew on board the aircraft were US citizens.
In the United States, a service of "hope and remembrance" is
planned at the Hendricks Chapel of Syracuse University in New York
state, which lost 35 students who had been studying at its London
campus. The service will be followed by a procession to its Wall of
Remembrance.
A further service will also take place at the university's Lubin House in New York.
Events at the Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia will centre on its Pan Am 103 Memorial Cairn.
It is made of 270 blocks of Scottish sandstone - one for each of the victims of the bombing.
Events in Lockerbie will see a wreath-laying at the
Dryfesdale Cemetery in the afternoon with a service at the Dryfesdale
Church in the evening which will have the theme of "looking forward".
One man, Libyan Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, was convicted of the
bombing at a special Scottish court sitting in the Netherlands in 2001.
He was released from jail on compassionate grounds in 2009 after he was diagnosed with advanced prostate cancer.
He died in his home in Tripoli last year.
The Lockerbie bombing
- Pan Am flight 103 from London to New York was destroyed by a bomb on 21 December 1988 over Lockerbie, Scotland
- All 243 passengers and 16 crew were killed, as well as 11 people on the ground
- Investigators believed two Libyan intelligence agents were responsible
- In 2003 Col Muammar Gaddafi accepted that Libya carried out the bombing but denied giving the orders himself
- There have been numerous theories about others who may have been involved
Source :
BBC News
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