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Blair could face Trial for War Crimes

KosmikK | 14.06.2007 23:56 | Iraq | London | World

LONDON, June 12--TONY BLAIR could face prosecution for war crimes in Iraq following a legal bid launched yesterday.



Former SNP MP Jim Sillars has handed a 10,000-word dossier to Lord Advocate Eilish Angiolini urging her to charge the PM under Scots law.

He claims Blair should be held to account for conspiring to overthrow Saddam Hussein's regime and for starting the war in Iraq.

Both are illegal under international law. An attempt to have Blair hauled before a criminal court in England failed after lawyers said it wasn't the place to deal with international law.

But Sillars claims Scottish courts have the power to try Blair for war crimes if they believe an established offence, such as murder, has been committed in the process.

Sillars said: "There can be no prosecution at the international criminal court because it doesn't have jurisdiction."

"There is no chance of a special court being established by the United Nations because Britain and the United States have the veto at the Security Council. There is no chance of a prosecution in England and Wales."

"But of course Scots law is an entirely different entity, an entirely different jurisdiction with different rules, procedures and instruments available to it."

Sillars said he had been told by legal experts that the Prime Minister has a case to answer.

And he warned: "The Lord Advocate would have to give a very good explanation why, with the evidence presented, she didn't instigate an investigation -- because we have jurisdiction."

Sillars spent six months putting together his complaint, which was lodged last Friday.

In a letter to the Lord Advocate, he said: "I am requesting you to investigate this complaint and prosecute in a Scottish court."

"Although I have a political past, this complaint is based on legal principles and case law, and I shall be obliged if you will examine it in that light and in that light alone."

Sillars, who was assistant secretary general with the Arab/British Chamber of Commerce for 14 years, said Britain and the US are constantly harangued as hypocrites throughout the Arab world.

He explained: "We preach the rule of law. We preach accountability inherent in democracy."

"But when it comes to applying international law, we seem to find it politically inconvenient to pursue the law as it should be pursued."

"The war on terror won't be won by bombs, bullets, aeroplanes and rockets - it will be won by winning the argument at an intellectual, moral level."

Sillars' complaint was launched at the same time as the latest move by the Tories at Westminster to get a new inquiry in the Iraq war -- but they will not join forces as Sillars is seeking a criminal conviction.

A Crown Office spokesman said: "We confirm receipt of correspondence from Jim Sillars. A response will be issued in due course."

Alalam News, Iran
 http://www.alalam.ir/english/en-NewsPage.asp?newsid=009030120070612192548

Mr Blair extradited? Not as crazy as it sounds

 http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/william_rees_mogg/article1913297.ece

KosmikK
- Homepage: http://chimesofreedom.blogspot.com

Additions

Someone DID try to arrest Blair!!

18.06.2007 11:57

Carolyn tried to arrest Tony Blair in March this year - here's how she got on.

 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/06/373363.html

Paul O'Hanlon
mail e-mail: o_hanlon@hotmail.com


Comments

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Yes, but is it realistic?

15.06.2007 08:29

How realistic is it to try and prosecute someone like Blair who really is only the recognisable face of the ruling class? Attempts have been made to prosecute criminals and mass murderers like former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and former Chilean dictator General Augusto Pinochet. Plaid Cymru (Party of Wales) MP Adam Price tried to have Blair impeached:  http://www.impeachblair.org/ - it is disappointing that only a minority of MPs have supported it. Price himself Price was ejected from the Commons chamber in March 2005 after accusing the Prime Minister of having "misled" Parliament and then refusing to withdraw his comment, in violation of the rules of the House.

Christopher Hitchens wrote the book `The Trial of Henry Kissinger` from which a documentary film was made:  http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0326306/ The odious Dr K, as veteran American broadcaster Danny Schechter calls him, is still at liberty and is unlikely ever to be tried in any court.

Former US attorney general Ramsey Clark organised war crimes tribunals for George Bush senior after the first gulf war and Bush junior after the current war on Iraq. He wrote a book about the illegalities of the first Gulf War called `The Fire this time` He also initiated an attempt to have the current George Bush impeached:
 http://www.impeachbush.org/site/PageServer
Sadly, Dumbo Dubya and his aged daddy are still free with the junior version contemplating even more war crimes against Iran.

Occasionally there is a sacraficial patsy like Lewis `Scooter` Libby who has been sentenced to 2 and a half years for perjury (in the "Valerie Plame affair") is an ongoing federal inquiry "into the alleged unauthorized disclosure of a CIA employee's identity," If only the real criminal Dick Cheney (Scooter’s boss) could be brought down, along with Bush himself but that is unlikely to happen.

How about a citizen’s arrest of Blair like the one reported recently in Indymedia?
 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/06/373363.html

Unfortunately it’s hard to see Blair or Bush or Kissinger in any court – Pinochet died in retirement. Still we should keep on trying and I hope Jim Sillars efforts get somewhere.


Paul O'Hanlon
mail e-mail: o_hanlon@hotmail.com


Ineternational Criminal Court

15.06.2007 09:10

I think is is far more realistic to expect Blair to be charged for war crimes than Pinochet, Kissenger et al simply because the UK was a signature to the ICC at the time of his crimes and had ratified the treaty. There is a second reason. Blair is a relatively young war criminal and so will not be able to fake senility like Pinochet tried.

Of course the UK is also a signatory to the OECD anti-corruption treaty that BAe flouts daily. Now BAe is adored by the US military but is seen as a foriegn competitor by the US arms companies, so again I am hopeful of a prosecution of BAe. Any conviction of BAe on fraud charges would expose Blair in that corruption scandal.

U.S. investigating BAE payoff allegations
 http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-bae15jun15,1,318780.story?coll=la-headlines-nation&ctrack=2&cset=true

U.S. Army officially salutes BAE workers
 http://www.unionleader.com/article.aspx?headline=U.S.+Army+officially+salutes+BAE+workers&articleId=ad2d85a3-7fb6-4cea-8b6d-a85574a68765

Danny