洛克比空难追查(有声)
http://n1audio.hjfile.cn/mh/2016/10/02/d2894489071667244ef9e8ec2944b6b3.mp3
When a plane travelling from London to New York crashed over the Scottish town of Lockerbie in 1988, it became the biggest terrorism investigation that the United States had ever conducted. All 259 passengers died, along with 11 people on the ground. A Libyan intelligence agent, Abdel Basset al-Megrahi was convicted of 270 counts of murder, but it was clear that he couldn't have acted alone. And last week it was announced that a new suspect has been identified, not by the investigators, but by the brother of one of the victims who's devoted his life to finding out what happened. Ken Dorstein works as an investigative journalist for the American network PBS and has made a documentary series for Frontline about the hunt for his brother's killers. He was a teenager when his brother David was killed, although he didn't know at the time that David was even on the plane.
Can I ask, do you know what's happened?
Look, there's a number of houses on fire. You know, it's just a residential area.
That houses. I think it's a plane, but you don't know.
You know, people believe a jet plane's come down on some houses. But that's all we know.
OK. Thanks very much.
I read the sports scores first. The front page obviously had a huge picture about the bombing and a full banner headline. And I do remember there was also an earthquake, I think in Armenia around the same time and I have to say, I mean if I'm honest about it, that my response to the Lockerbie bombing was probably not that much different than my response to the earthquake in Armenia.
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