British Prime Minister Gordon Brown declared Sunday that his government will support IRA victims in seeking recompense from Libya, in a move conservatives called a "U-turn" from his earlier position.
"I very much care about what has happened to those people who have been victims of IRA terrorism," Brown said at a Sunday news consultation in Germany.
"We will appoint devoted officers in the Foreign Office and our embassy in Tripoli [who] will accompany the families' representatives to meetings with the Libyan government to negotiate recompense," he added. "And the first of these meetings is being held in the next few weeks."
useful links: transport rankings
"I very much care about what has happened to those people who have been victims of IRA terrorism," Brown said at a Sunday news consultation in Germany.
"We will appoint devoted officers in the Foreign Office and our embassy in Tripoli [who] will accompany the families' representatives to meetings with the Libyan government to negotiate recompense," he added. "And the first of these meetings is being held in the next few weeks."
useful links: transport rankings