

Report by The Guardian on protest when Tony Blair is greeted with chants of "war criminal" as he arrives at University College London.


Report by The Guardian on protest when Tony Blair is greeted with chants of "war criminal" as he arrives at University College London.
The arms industry is embedded in Britain's universities, with the help of Tony Blair and his acolytes, such as former UK defence minister John Reid.
"...they are trying to staff the office with that classic, rotate your interns; get the interns to do the office admin, don't pay them a thing and, after three months, kick them out, get someone else in."
David Lawley-Wakelin has been charged under the public order act 1986 for using threatening abusive or insulting words or behavior that may have caused someone harassment, alarm or distress.
Alastair Campbell basks in the celebrity limelight, his war crimes expurged from the collective imagination, instead of demanding prosecution alongside those of Tony Blair.
Far too many of those who lied to parliament and people in order to take us in to an illegal and devestating war are still in positions of public power and responsibility.
The man who has done more than most to contribute to anti-western feeling among Muslims in the Middle East and Asia is called upon to tell us why Muslims shouldn't be angry about anything.
Archbishop Desmond Tutu's criticisms of both Blair and Bush effectively call into question the attempts by both men to present themselves as politicians motivated by religious faith.
Without legal justification, the attack on Iraq was an act of mass murder. It caused the deaths of up to a million people, and ranks among the greatest crimes the world has ever seen.
The US and UK fabricated the grounds to behave like playground bullies and they have driven us to the edge of a precipice where we now stand – with the spectre of Syria and Iran before us.
Foundation for the Glorification of Tony Blair asks the Vatican to make him a saint for joining George W Bush to bring democracy to the people of Iraq by killing one million of them.
Morality and leadership are indivisible,says Archbishop Tutu. In this context, it would be inappropriate and untenable for him to share a platform with Tony Blair.
The toilets of dozens of senior New Labour MPs all over the country are being regularly infested by a poo with the face of Tony Blair that just won't flush away.
As long as the decision-making processes that made Iraq possible remain shrouded in secrecy, then there is nothing to stop something similar happening again.
The Kazakh dictator Nazarbayev apparently paid Blair $13m to eulogise his odious regime in a state video and applaud him for "subtlety and ingenuity … in a region fraught with difficulties".
As Tony Blair grins and parades himself once again, his cheerleaders want us to forget the illegal invasion of Iraq as he tries to worm his way back into mainstream British politics.