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August 2003
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For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
August 15, 2003
Statement by the Press Secretary
Today, in a letter to the UN Security Council, Libya stated it "accepts responsibility for the actions of its officials" in the bombing of Pan Am 103 on December 21, 1988, and has made arrangements to pay compensation to the families of the victims in accordance with an agreement worked out directly between the families and the government of Libya.
In recognition of these steps, and to allow the families' settlement to go forward, the United States has notified the United Nations Security Council that it will not oppose the lifting of UN sanctions on Libya, which were suspended in 1999.
The Libyan regime's behavior -- including its poor human rights record and lack of democratic institutions, its destructive role in perpetuating regional conflicts in Africa, and its continued and worrisome pursuit of weapons of mass destruction and their related delivery systems -- remains a cause for serious concern. The United States will intensify its efforts to end threatening elements of Libya's behavior, and U.S. bilateral sanctions on Libya will remain in full force until Libya addresses these concerns. Libya must also continue to take definitive action to assist in the fight against international terrorism.
The efforts undertaken by the U.S. government in this matter serve to remind all who would engage in terrorist acts that the United States will always seek justice and redress for its citizens. Combating the evil of terrorism remains a paramount commitment of the United States and we will not relent in that continuing struggle.
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