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Tony Blair's little tantrum
by The Age via rialator - theage.com.au Tuesday, Jun 12 2007, 10:49pm
international / mass media / other press

Media feral and vicious, says Blair

A very ungrateful Tony Blair erupts over his perceived unfair treatment by the mass media. But not a mention of its support in promulgating his 45 minute lie regarding WMD and attack capability of pre-invasion Iraq. We also note that the media hasn't hounded Blair regarding his accountability for civilian causalities in the pre-emptive illegal invasion based on lies -- but who would expect integrity or gratitude from a prima donna? The following report is very revealing of a personality that should never have had influence over the lives of others. It is not the media that Blair should fear or berate, it is history that will portray him in grim detail and really expose the poodle who would have been a prime minister but for the very profound need to be a sycophant.

Tony Blair demonstrating his proficiency!
Tony Blair demonstrating his proficiency!

BRITISH Prime Minister Tony Blair has accused the media of behaving like a "feral beast" that "tears people and reputations to bits".

Mr Blair delivered a valedictory warning that the pursuit of controversy rather than accurate news was undermining politicians' "capacity to take the right decisions".

He said the "unravelling" of journalistic standards in favour of "sensation above all else" was a result of increasing diversity and competition in the media following the advent of the internet and rolling news.

The Prime Minister acknowledged that he was "complicit" in the problem for placing an "inordinate" emphasis on spin in the early days of New Labour.

In the land that produced Scoop, Evelyn Waugh's comic novel of journalistic mischief, it would seem unsurprising for politicians to let rip at reporters. But was it going too far to call the media a "feral beast"?

Up to a point, some reporters might have said, borrowing the expression from Scoop that mid-ranking editors used to contradict all-powerful proprietors.

Mr Blair was not in an "up to a point" mood. He was in full-throated roar, using one of his last speeches before leaving office in 15 days to settle scores with a media corps he holds responsible for hounding, badgering, blustering and bludgeoning the nation's leaders since he came to power 10 years ago.

"The fear of missing out means today's media, more than ever before, hunts in a pack," he said in the speech. "In these modes, it is like a feral beast, just tearing people and reputations to bits. But no one dares miss out."

He quoted a past prime minister, Stanley Baldwin, who berated the news media for having "power without responsibility — the prerogative of the harlot through the ages", a charge that borrowed from Kipling.

Mr Blair also evoked the memory of prime ministers Gladstone and Disraeli to note that he was not the first leader to face "extraordinarily brutal treatment" in the newspapers.

"I've made this speech after much hesitation," he said. "I know it will be rubbished in certain quarters. But I also know this has needed to be said."

His targets were quick to respond. "I think by and large the British press is pretty good," said Trevor Kavanagh, the former political editor of top-selling tabloid The Sun. "I think it does its best to be level accurate and sensitive to the requirements of both the people it writes about and the people it writes for. This was a very strange speech."

Mr Blair's relationship with the British media has long been complicated. He became known for courting Rupert Murdoch's News Corp, whose British assets include The Sun, and for the aggressive media policies pursued by his onetime communications director Alastair Campbell.

Mr Blair admitted that, initially, his Government paid "inordinate attention" to "courting, assuaging and persuading the media".

Recently, British journalists have seemed to become increasingly aggressive in their questioning of the Prime Minister.

At a news conference with Mr Blair in Washington last month, even President George Bush seemed to reprimand British reporters for trying to "tap dance on his political grave".

PA, NEW YORK TIMES

© 2007. The Age Company Ltd

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Charge Blair with war crimes in Scotland
by Auslan Cramb via rialator - telegraph.co.uk Thursday, Jun 14 2007, 8:19pm

12 June, 2007 -- A former Nationalist MP has called for Tony Blair to be charged in Scotland with war crimes.

The demand was made in a 10,000-word document compiled by Jim Sillars, and backed by his wife Margo MacDonald, an independent MSP.

It has been sent to Eilish Angiolini, the Lord Advocate, and claims that the Prime Minister should face two charges in connection with the invasion of Iraq in 2003.
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Mr Sillars said that legal experts had told him that the Prime Minister had a case to answer, even though similar attempts had failed south of the border.

He believes that the necessary powers to arrest and charge Mr Blair exist in Scotland, and has called on the Lord Advocate to investigate.

He added: “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.”

Mr Sillars claimed there was “overwhelming evidence” that Mr Blair was guilty of conspiracy to wage war.

The alleged evidence includes official memos, the memoirs of the weapons inspector Hans Blix, and research carried out in the US and the UK.

Speaking at a Holyrood press conference hosted by his wife, he said: “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.”

Mr Sillars added that the timing of a new attempt by the Conservatives to force the Government to hold an inquiry into the war was a coincidence.

A spokesman for the Crown Office said: “We can confirm receipt of correspondence from Jim Sillars. This will be considered and a response will be issued in due course.”

© Copyright of Telegraph Media Group Limited 2007

Mr Blair extradited? Not as crazy as it sounds
by William Rees-Moggon via rialator - TimesOnline Thursday, Jun 14 2007, 8:32pm

11 June, 2007 -- There has been little discussion in the press of the recent House of Lords judgment in the Dabas case. A friend has sent me the Opinions of the Lords of Appeal. I am sure that at least one other person in London will have read them: Cherie Booth, QC, who is the in-house lawyer of the Blair family, and a good one. If yesterday’s Sunday Telegraph is correct: “Cherie is worried about a prosecution – she still thinks it is a real possibility.”

If there is a prosecution of Tony Blair after he leaves office, it may arise either out of the invasion of Iraq in 2003, or out of torture allegations, probably at Guantanamo Bay, or connected to United Kingdom support for “extraordinary rendition”. In all probability, the charges would be made in some other European jurisdiction, under the laws of some other member of the European Union. That is why the Dabas case, though little noticed, is crucially important.

In this case, the Lords of Appeal defined the position in British law of the European “system of surrender between judicial authorities”. This system of surrender was “conceived and adopted” as a European Council Framework Decision on June 13, 2002, and was adopted into British law in the Extradition Act 2003. The 2003 Act also abolished the requirement that there should be a prima facie case made for extradition to the United States, and some other countries.

The basic facts of the Dabas case were outlined by Lord Hope of Craighead: “On March 17, 2005, a European arrest warrant was issued by the High Court of Justice, Madrid, for the extradition of the appellant, Moutaz Almallah Dabas, to Spain. The decision on which the warrant was based was an order by Judge Juan del Olmo Gálvez that the appellant should be subject to unconditional temporary imprisonment to await his trial for the offence of collaboration with an Islamist terrorist organisation in connection with explosions that took place in four trains in Madrid, with much loss of life, on March 11, 2004.”

There is no suggestion that the surrender of Mr Dabas would involve a gross miscarriage of justice. The allegation is one of conspiracy to assist terrorism, with major loss of life. All five law lords joined in dismissing Mr Dabas’s appeal. They closed all the loopholes.

In the case of the United States, one key problem has been the loss of the requirement that the country seeking extradition should show a prima facie case against the accused.

That has resulted in cases of apparent injustice against the “NatWest Three” and similar groups or individuals. In the case of Europe, there will be concerns about the acceptance that any European jurisdiction can demand the surrender of an accused party and that the requirement of “double criminality” should be removed in many types of case. Ms Booth may have been particularly disturbed by the partially dissenting minority opinion of Lord Scott of Foscote, which deals with the issue of double criminality.

One protection for the accused has been this requirement of “double criminality”; that principle requires that “the alleged conduct of the person whose extradition was sought was not only a criminal offence in the requesting member state but would also have been a criminal offence if done in the requested member state”. Even today, you cannot be “surrendered” to Ruritania unless your offence is against British as well as Ruritanian law. Unfortunately, there are exceptions to this wholesome rule, and Lord Scott has pointed them out.

If an offence can be punished under the law of the requesting state by more than three years’ imprisonment, then the double criminality safeguard ceases to apply to a variety of loosely expressed crimes: “Terrorism, corruption, racism and xenophobia, swindling, etc.” If a Ruritanian judge, anxious to make a name for himself, issues a European arrest warrant for a British ex-minister, and brings the warrant under the appropriate Ruritanian laws, the British courts will be bound to honour that warrant.

In the words of Lord Scott, “whether the conduct in question fell within a specified category was for the law of the requesting state to define”. Ruritanian law trumps British. Lord Scott went on to observe that “there has been no harmonisation of the criminal laws of the European Union member states, and, I believe, no widespread enthusiasm for any such harmonisation. So the possibility of surrender for prosecution in relation to conduct that would not be criminal in the requested state is a very live one”.

The problem is that the 2003 Act gives effect to the European principle that there should be “mutual recognition” by each member state of the validity of the judicial orders and decisions of other member states. As with the United States, where Harvard-trained lawyers can tremble before a Texas jury, so in Europe there can be very different standards in different jurisdictions. These are reflected in different laws, procedures and in the politicisation of judges, which is much higher in Italy, for instance, than it is here. The idea that all European courts are equal in character may be convenient, but it is a legal fiction.

Many people will think that the prosecution of Tony Blair is a remote risk; I do not, and nor, apparently, does Cherie Booth, who knows the law better than most people. One can remember the Pinochet extradition case, which was started by a Spanish judge, though the torture had taken place in Chile. The Council of Europe human rights organisation has found that Britain gave logistical support to CIA extraordinary rendition flights, and that Diego Garcia was used to process such prisoners. Apart from any other laws, the Convention on Torture, which Britain has signed, gives wide powers for judicial action.

I have sympathy with the old doctrine of sovereign immunity. I do not think the Labour Government should have accepted the European Framework or passed the Extradition Act in 2003. But it did, and that presents serious problems. We have made British extradition law respond to every judge in Europe and to the varying laws of every European country. That was a crazy thing to do.

© 2007 Times Newspapers Ltd


 
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