“The
Worst Terrorist In The World” Lying To
Himself
Tony Blair Responds To The Iraq Inquiry
Video
Tony Blair's lengthy response to Sir John Chilcot's
inquiry into the Iraq War:
Posted July
07, 2016
Families of
killed service personnel react to Chilcot Inquiry
'Blair is world's worst terrorist':
families of Iraq war victims react to
Chilcot report
Relatives of military personnel
killed in conflict welcome findings
while some say former PM must face
consequences
By
Esther Addley
July 07,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- Tony Blair was described as “the worst
terrorist in the world” by a woman whose brother was
killed in the Iraq war, as the family members of
British soldiers gave their response to the Chilcot
report.
Sarah O’Connor broke down in tears as she addressed
an emotional press conference shortly after the
long-awaited report was published.
“There is one terrorist in this world that the world
needs to be aware of, and his name is Tony Blair,
the world’s worst terrorist,” she said, to cheers
from some of the other relatives.
O’Connor,
whose brother, Sgt Bob O’Connor, was
killed with nine other airmen when his plane was
shot down near Baghdad in 2005, said her
overriding emotion having read some of the report
was anger. “That healing that for 11 and a half
years I have worked for … I have gone back to that
time when I learned that my brother had been
killed.”
About 25
bereaved family members were at the Queen Elizabeth
II conference centre in central London, where they
were given a few hours to read the report before it
was published. Several of those present carried
pictures of their loved ones, or wore T-shirts or
badges with their images.
Most
welcomed the report, with a number of family members
standing to applaud as Sir John Chilcot left the
stage after giving a statement, but there was also
widespread anger, while several relatives wept
openly.
“Everything
he said today, we have been saying for all these
years,” said Rose Gentle, mother of
Fusilier Gordon Gentle, who was killed by a
roadside bomb in 2004 aged 19. An inquest later
found that his death was unlawful and that logistics
failures had contributed to it.
“Now we can
turn and say we have got the proof, we’ve got it in
our hands,” said Gentle. “Twelve years of fighting
for my son have been worth it. I’d do it again if I
had to.”
Pauline
Graham, Rose Gentle’s mother, said: “Now we know
where we stand and what we can do. Tony Blair should
be taken to court for trial for murder. He can’t get
away with this any more.”
Reg Keys,
the father of L/Cpl Tom Keys who died in 2003 aged
20, told reporters that when he considered the
ongoing terrorist deaths in Iraq, “I can only
conclude that unfortunately, and sadly, my son died
in vain”.
That
sentiment was echoed by Theresa Thompson, the mother
of Pte Kevin Thompson, who was killed by an
improvised explosive device (IED) in Basra in 2007,
at the age of 21. “It was an illegal war. He died in
vain. He died for no purpose,” she said.
“I won’t
stop until Tony Blair is held responsible for this,”
said her husband, Mark Thompson. “He should come
forward to the families and prove himself, instead
of being a coward [and giving a statement] behind a
camera. Be a man, stand up for what he has done.
“Just look
at the parents, look at what he has destroyed. We
have lost grandchildren, we have lost a
daughter-in-law. He’s still got his family, he’s got
everything.”
The date of
their son’s death, 6 May, was also Blair’s birthday,
Thompson said. “He’ll be opening his presents and
cards, we take flowers to my son’s garden.”
“Chilcot’s
report … he’s done exactly as he said he would – it
wasn’t a whitewash by any means,” said Eddie
Hancock, from Wigan, whose 19-year-old son Jamie was
a Kingsman with the Duke of Lancaster’s Regiment
when he was killed in Basra in 2006.
“Obviously,
some people will never be happy unless there’s a
rope there. But what he has actually said is that
Blair undermined the United Nations. Now, if
somebody does that, you would think that the act was
illegal. He’s also misled parliament, he’s
fabricated facts and misrepresented them.
“I hope,
and I would like to call on all politicians in this
country, that for the grievous damage this man has
inflicted on this nation, on its armed forces, he be
banned from any form of public office for life. At
the very least.”
Tony
Fisher, whose brother Sgt Simon Hamilton-Jewell was
killed alongside five other military police officers
in Majar al-Kabir in 2003, fought back tears as he
described the report as “very powerful”.
Fisher
said: “It’s 13 years, and it still hurts, you never
get rid of it. And you don’t want to see other
people going through the same thing, for the sake of
one man’s arrogance. Mr Blair keeps apologising for
everybody else around him, but he is the man
responsible. The arrogant man hasn’t got the ability
to apologise for his own mistakes.”
Fisher is
one of many family members who hope the report could
lead to prosecutions of Blair and others. Matthew
Jury, of the legal firm McCue & Partners, who
represents the families of 29 victims, said it was
too early to judge whether prosecutions might be
possible.
“The next
steps are to spend the next days and weeks giving
this full and proper consideration as to what
happens next. Legal proceedings may be possible, but
we need to do a full and forensic analysis of the
report to determine what is next.”
As he left
the conference centre surrounded by other family
members, Peter Brierley, the father of 28-year-old
L/Cpl Shaun Brierley who was killed when his Land
Rover crashed in Kuwait in 2003, said he was
satisfied with the report. “When I came here this
morning, if you had asked me, ‘What do you want out
of it?’, it wouldn’t be too far away from what I
have already read.” As such, he said, rather than
sharing the anger of some of the other families, he
felt “relief … that we’ve finally got what we
wanted”.
He added:
“One day in the future, I want to be able to go
home, sit in my chair and turn my telly on and say,
‘I have done the best I can. No matter the final
outcome, I’ve done everything I possibly can.’ With
this today, that seems to be a lot closer now.”
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