Showing posts with label Cardinal Keith O'Brien. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cardinal Keith O'Brien. Show all posts

Monday, October 25, 2010

Leader of Scotland’s Catholics Cardinal O’Brien to sign Holyrood e-petition calling for inquiry on Lockerbie bomber conviction

cardinalobrienCardinal Keith O’Brien, leader of Roman Catholic Church in Scotland. THE leader of Scotland’s Roman Catholic Church, Cardinal Keith O’Brien is to add his name to an ‘e-petition’ launched at the Scottish Parliament calling for an independent inquiry to be set up by Holyrood into the 2001 conviction of Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi for the bombing of Pan Am flight 103 in December 1988. The e-petition, raised by: Dr Jim Swire, Professor Robert Black QC, Mr Robert Forrester, Father Patrick Keegans and Mr Iain McKie on behalf of Justice for Megrahi on 08 October 2010 calls on the Scottish Parliament to urge the Scottish Government to open an independent inquiry into the 2001 Kamp van Zeist conviction of Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi for the bombing of Pan Am flight 103 in December 1988.

The closure date is 28th October and signatures are not limited to those resident in Scotland, nor indeed the UK: anyone anywhere can sign.

To sign your name to the e-petition, visit the Scottish Parliament's e-petitions website at the following link : http://epetitions.scottish.parliament.uk/view_petition.asp?PetitionID=417 or if you prefer, Text '417' and your name to 07537 400395 to add your e-signature.

The Scottish Catholic Media Office issued the following Press Release on Cardinal O'Brien's announcement :

Cardinal to sign Lockerbie petition

25 October 2010

Cardinal Keith O’Brien will add his name to an online petition calling for an Independent inquiry to be set up by the Scottish Parliament into the 2001 conviction of Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi for the bombing of Pan Am flight 103 in December 1988. The petition which closes on 28 October 2010 will be submitted to the Parliament for consideration.

Commenting on his decision to sign the petition, Cardinal O’Brien said; “Earlier this year, I described the murder of 270 innocent people on board Pan Am flight 103 over the town of Lockerbie on 21 December 1988 as an act of unbelievable horror and gratuitous barbarity. Many legal consequences flowed from that act culminating in the conviction of a Libyan citizen, Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi for the bombing. From the moment that verdict was announced, voices have been raised in protest. Over the years the clamour has grown amongst, lawyers, politicians, academics and growing numbers of ordinary citizens that the verdict amounted to a miscarriage of justice.”

Cardinal O’Brien added; “I do not claim to have examined all the evidence in this case, far from it, but I do claim to be increasingly concerned about the reputation of the Scottish Justice system. I have defended publicly the system of justice in this country and have done so because it enjoys my support and confidence. Global accusations of wrongful conviction made against our system must be dealt with. Left unheeded they will weaken the administration of justice in Scotland by casting doubts on its probity and ability. I believe the best way to remedy this is for the Scottish Parliament to launch an Independent inquiry into the 2001 conviction of Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi for the bombing of Pan Am flight 103. Regardless of the outcome I believe Scotland’s Justice System would be strengthened by such a process. Either a conviction will be upheld and the process vindicated or it will be struck down, demonstrating to the world that Scotland has the wisdom and compassion needed to rectify its mistakes. In either event I will willingly accept the outcome.”

Monday, May 04, 2009

Cardinal Keith O’Brien bids to end US extradition threat over Scots family

The leader of the Catholic Church in Scotland, Cardinal Keith O’Brien has intervened in a bid to help a family facing extradition to the US over allegations connected with sales from their Chemical business. The allegations by US authorities specify that specific substances were sold to US citizens which could be used in the manufacture of narcotics, however the substances and their sale is not illegal here in the UK.

The Sunday Post reports :

Cardinal’s bid to end extradition hell

Cardinal's bid to end extradition hell

An appeal has been launched on the Shirley McKie forum to see the case is handled under Scots Law, asking the First Minister to intervene over his over anxious Justice Secretary who has already signed the extradition warrant on the family …

Link to Shirley McKie forum appeal

Brian and Kerry Howes face being extradited to US from Scotland when they have NOT committed a crime in Scotland. This couple have 4 children and another baby is due any day now.

ALL these children will be taken into care and probably adopted if these people are extradited for something that is NOT A CRIME IN SCOTLAND OR IN US. The children will suffer terribly since they have no other family to look after them if their parents are sent to Arizona.

There also seems to be a punishment overkill in this case. Not only do they lose their business, their home, their children, get no support from UK courts, sent off to Arizona, which BTW is a nasty State, and face 20 years in jail plus a huge fine of $250,000.

Scotland should not be taking part in this at all.

The address of the site with the case on it is
http://extradition.org.uk/

See this article about the case: US jail threat to Scots family
http://www.sundaypost.com/postindex.htm

LISTEN TO TWO PHONE CALLS ABOUT THE CASE BELOW::

DEA and US Extradition Corruption
This is a conversation with a US DEA officer from Arizona called Don Sherard who likes to brag about operations that he has been involved in that indicts people in the UK and around the world based on deception.

The deception in this case is severe and the methods used are in my opinion and other legal minded people I have spoken to about this conversation and others tell me it may be part of a wider corruption stemming from the UK extradition treaty with the US that does not require any evidence for extradition.

This conversation and others with news media and solicitors shows a disregard for a proper process when the US prosecutor asks for extradition of a UK citizen
http://extradition.org.uk/2009/01...ea-and-us-extradition-corruption/

Here is another of several conversations with the US DEA a man called Don Sherard who was at the centre of my wife’s and my extradition.

Listen to this call as it shows that the US had no evidence of Conspiracy in our indictments and worse still Cleveland Police and the US DEA conspired with each other and planned in this Conspiracy to illegally have computers and other property sent to the US in 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2007 without a warrant as required by the extradition act.

Further to this conspiracy Cleveland Police officer Gillian Matthews and Rebecca Driscol and DSI Duffy along with DC Thomas and Cleveland Police Officers not named and some not yet known along with Don Sherard of The US Meth Lab investigation in Phoenix Arizona in Marico county and several not named and some unknown also conspired to Have my wife and I extradited contrary to the laws of the UK and US.

Just have a listen and make up your own mind up.
http://extradition.org.uk/2009/01...-us-extradition-corruption-proof/

PLEASE WRITE, FAX, PHONE AND EMAIL THE FIRST MINISTER AND JUSTICE MINISTER OF SCOTLAND. WE NEED TO FLOOD THEM WITH PROTESTS.

Rt Hon Alex Salmond MSP
The Scottish Parliament
Edinburgh
EH99 1SP
Telephone: 01467 670070
RNID TypeTalk calls welcome
Fax: 01779 474460
Email:
FirstMinister@scotland.gsi.gov.uk

Kenny MacAskill MSP
The Scottish Parliament
Edinburgh
EH99 1SP
Telephone: 0131 661 9546
RNID TypeTalk calls welcome
Telephone: 0131 348 5012
Fax: 0131 348 5944
Parliament Office E-mail:
Kenny.MacAskill.msp@scottish.parliament.uk

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Cardinal Keith O’Brien : Alex Salmond’s Scots Government are moral cowards

The leader of Scotland’s Roman Catholic church, Cardinal Keith O’Brien has accused the current Scottish Government of “moral cowardice” in an article in the Sunday Times Scotland newspaper. (With all the corruption stories around in Scotland, the SNP will never be remembered for moral leadership, or ethics – Ed)

The Sunday Times reports :

Cardinal Keith O'Brien brands SNP ‘cowards’

Scotland's Roman Catholic chief attacks the government over its failure to tackle antisocial behaviour epidemic

The leader of Scotland’s Roman Catholics has accused the Scottish government of “moral cowardice”, which he claims has left the country on the edge of an “abyss of social collapse”.

In a scathing attack on Alex Salmond’s administration, Cardinal Keith O’Brien accuses ministers of being too scared to take a moral lead on social issues such as drink and drug abuse, promiscuity and anti-social behaviour.

Instead of tackling the root causes, O’Brien says politicians are resorting to “ever more frenzied regulation” which he claims is powerless to curb dangerous and immoral behaviour.

“Scotland is staring into the abyss of social collapse. Too many of our young people are caught up in a maelstrom of drug- and alcohol-fuelled promiscuity, hedonism, vandalism and outright nihilism,” he writes in today’s Sunday Times.

“It is a whirlwind, which we will reap for a long time to come. We are paying the price for denying too many of our young people security, stability and morality, a price paidin shattered lives and broken children.”

He adds: “Like the manic sorcerer whose spells have gone disastrously wrong, our politicians cannot control the urge to cast yet more spells upon the chaos. It is an approach that seems to be driven by moral cowardice.”

O’Brien describes the government’s crackdown on cheap alcohol as “flawed” and “utterly discredited” because it assumes binge drinking can be cured by “ever more frenzied regulation”.

The comments are likely to alarm Salmond. The SNP’s rising fortunes have been partly due to the collapse of traditional Catholic allegiance to the Labour party in the west of Scotland.

Gerry Hassan, a policy analyst and political author, said MSPs had helped foster more open debate on certain moral issues but were wary of being seen to lecture people.

The Scottish government denied that ministers lacked moral courage. “We have shown on a number of fronts that we are not afraid to take bold, decisive action where needed — not least in our radical proposals to tackle Scotland’s alcohol misuse problem,” a spokesman said.

Last month the Scottish government confirmed it intends to ban loss-leading drink promotions, including two-for-one deals, and to introduce a minimum price for alcohol.

Ministers say excessive drinking costs Scotland £2.25 billion a year, including a £400m for industry in lost productivity and absence, £400m for the NHS Scotland and £288m for policing costs.

Cardinal O’Brien’s article from the Sunday Times :

Frenzied laws are failing our young people

We obsess over the symptoms and ignore the cause
Cardinal Keith O’Brien

Scotland is staring into the abyss of social collapse. Too many of our young people are caught up in a maelstrom of drug- and alcohol-fuelled promiscuity, hedonism, vandalism and outright nihilism. It is a whirlwind, which we will reap for a long time to come.

We are paying the price for denying too many of our young people security, stability and morality, a price paid in shattered lives and broken children. Yet as the human debris of our failure accumulates, our politicians have become paralysed by a chronic fear of moralising. In place of leadership and a moral compass, a stifling political consensus seems to compel our parties and our parliament into ever more frenzied regulation.

In recent weeks much coverage has been given to the decision by the Scottish government to limit sales of alcohol to young people by increasing the selling price through restrictions on a variety of retail offers and by asking local authorities to consider raising the age for alcohol purchases. This policy mirrors the approach taken by this and previous administrations to drug use, vandalism, anti-social behaviour, obesity, even promiscuity, and might usefully be called the “command and control” model of public governance.

Advocates of such a model take the view that “bad behaviour”, whether it be public drunkenness, health-threatening over-eating or teenage promiscuity, are all immutable and unchangeable. The urge and desire to commit acts of this type cannot be curbed, far less removed, goes the argument, therefore public, social and health policy must all be orientated towards mitigating the effects.

It is an approach that is deeply flawed and utterly discredited. It is also, however, the logical destination for a policy that refuses to judge or differentiate between actions conducive to the public good and those who threaten it.

When our fellow citizens err and lapse, we seldom focus on them or ask why they behaved as they did. Rather we rush to impose legal restraints, forgetting that no external restrictions can ever match the effectiveness of self-restraint. When a toddler is shot with an airgun, we regulate the sale of such weapons; alcohol abuse by our young people is met with legislation to restrict sales, and sexual promiscuity with regulations aimed at ensuring contraception and abortion are widely available. We do not as a society take action to tackle the underlying motivation; instead we limit our action to blunting the impact of our excesses. We obsess over the symptoms and ignore the cause.

Scotland has one of the highest divorce rates in the western world and one of the highest teenage pregnancy rates and sexually transmitted infection statistics. These trends are connected. A report published in 2007 revealed that if you experience family breakdown, you are 75% more likely to fail at school, 70% more likely to be a drug addict and 50% more likely to have alcohol problems.

In the face of all this evidence, our parliament has enacted legislation making divorce easier and faster and giving greater legal recognition to cohabitation, while our taxation system ruthlessly penalises long-term legal commitment. These attacks on marriage and stable family relationships have caused unimaginable misery, pain and life-long failure for thousands of children and have had disastrous social and economic consequences.

Like the manic sorcerer whose spells have gone disastrously wrong, our politicians cannot control the urge to cast yet more spells upon the chaos. It is an approach that seems to be driven by moral cowardice and perhaps because the alternative, to admit they were wrong, is far too frightening.

Is remedial action too late? Can we yet modify and correct the most corrosive attitudes and behaviour that are causing our society to splinter? Hope remains. In a recent YouthLink Scotland survey on attitudes, interests and aspirations of young people, when asked to identify those they most trusted and respected, encouragingly the vast majority put parents at the top of the list. Today’s children are tomorrow’s parents.

To help and sustain them in their parenting, we must urgently restore support for marriage. Marriage remains an ideal to which most people aspire, and it still provides the surest foundation for strong and healthy families. For couples intending to marry,

we should offer at public expense universal access to marriage preparation courses; for those facing difficulties in their marriages we should ensure remedial and reconciliation services are easily and quickly available. The cost benefits of preventing breakdown hugely outweigh the gargantuan costs of dealing with the after-effects. We must also reform the tax-credit system, which currently favours children who live with a lone parent rather than with both parents.

Unless we reverse course, our divorce rate, teen pregnancy rate, sexually transmitted infection numbers and alcohol- and drug-dependency problems will multiply. We cannot micro- legislate or regulate our way out of this situation. We cannot possibly predict every conceivable aberration and prepare a parliamentary response to it. Instead we must educate a new generation in morality and objective truth.

Cardinal Keith O’Brien is leader of Scotland’s Roman Catholics