US, Libya discuss 1980s attacks
2008-05-30 08:37
Washington - Senior United States and Libyan officials are meeting in London this week to try to reach a deal on compensation cases from the Lockerbie air disaster and other 1980s incidents, a Bush administration official said on Thursday.
US Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs David Welch was leading the American delegation in the talks, said the official, who declined to be named because the discussions were still going on. The State Department had no comment.
At a meeting in London two months ago Libya presented what a US official called a "comprehensive" deal to resolve a string of compensation cases, which had soured relations between the former foes.
They included cases arising from the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988, which killed 270 people, including 189 Americans and the 1986 bombing of a West Berlin disco in which two US servicemen were killed.
US, Libya restore ties
Libya, which was implicated in both incidents, agreed to pay the families of the Lockerbie victims $10m per victim but had not made the final payment. It had not reached any deal to pay compensation for the German disco bombing.
The US restored diplomatic ties with Libya two years ago after Tripoli gave up its weapons of mass destruction programme in 2003.
Diplomatic sources said a fixed dollar amount was not included in the Libyan deal offered in March, which was aimed largely at speeding up the settlement of claims against Libya that had dragged on for two decades.
Tripoli's new offer followed US legislation this year that expanded existing American laws to enable terrorism victims to collect damages from governments like Libya by having their assets frozen.
Libya: We are punished
In addition, a US judge in January ordered Libya to pay billions of dollars in damages to relatives of Americans killed in a 1989 suitcase bombing of a French airliner over Niger.
The legislation and the January ruling angered Libya, which said it was being punished rather than rewarded for giving up its weapons of mass destruction programme, a move that led to a thaw in relations.
In addition, US companies seeking to trade with Libya said they were unable to do so because of fear of lawsuits that could be slapped on them by Americans seeking to freeze Libyan assets.
The Bush administration was trying to get parliamentarians to exempt Libya from the new law and US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had made clear she would like this issue to be settled.
Rice had held back from visiting Libya because of the compensation cases and other human rights concerns. She had said she still hoped to visit Tripoli before the end of the Bush administration's term in January 2009.