Families: Blair 'Not Welcome' At War Service "He shouldn't be there because he's the one
who killed them." By
Severin Carrell The Independent - UK 10-5-3
- The families of British soldiers killed in Iraq have
fiercely criticised Tony Blair's decision to attend a remembrance
service for Britain's war dead.
-
- One grieving relative - the father of the helicopter
pilot Philip Green killed in a crash - said the Prime Minister should
stay away from the service at St Paul's Cathedral on Friday.
-
- Richard Green, a businessman from Grantham,
Lincolnshire, claimed Mr Blair had lied to the nation about the need for
war and was ultimately to blame for the deaths of 51 British troops. "He
shouldn't be there because he's the one that killed them," he said. The
attacks are highly damaging for Mr Blair - coming only days after he
avoided an embarrassing clash with Labour activists over his decision to
attack Iraq without United Nations backing.
-
- At St Paul's, the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh will
be joined by Mr Blair and other senior ministers - including the Defence
Secretary Geoff Hoon - for a remembrance service for the British
servicemen killed since the coalition invasion on 20 March. Soldiers
from all the units involved in the conflict will also attend.
-
- But the event is at risk of being overshadowed by
deepening unhappiness among the relatives about the justification for
invading, particularly after the US-led inspection team admitted on
Thursday it could find no weapons of mass destruction.
-
- The Government's efforts to put aside the controversy
by honouring the war dead - and to "pray for the people of Iraq" - will
also be dogged by deep unease over Mr Hoon's and Downing Street's roles
in events leading up to the suspected suicide of the weapons' scientist
David Kelly.
-
- Among the 250 relatives attending will be Mr Green,
his wife and two daughters, and the family of Ian Seymour, a commando
killed in a helicopter crash on the second day of the war. Other
families due at St Paul's are also understood to be privately critical
of the decision to go to war.
-
- Lianne Seymour, Commando Seymour's widow, from Poole,
Dorset, said Mr Blair should only attend St Paul's if he felt "true
remorse" about the deaths of British troops. She was furious that the
Prime Minister had insisted last week that he did not regret the
war.
-
- "If he thinks that those losses are truly justified
considering all the points of contention - such as the reports from the
investigators that weapons of mass destruction hadn't been found - I
would find it hypocritical for him to turn up," she said. "Tributes
aren't enough. I think there should be true remorse."
-
- Mr Green admitted he felt highly emotional about Mr
Blair's presence at the service. "I think he's a war criminal, it's as
simple as that. The man, without any consideration to the Labour
parliamentary party, elected to go to war with this scabby little friend
in Texas [President Bush], and killed 51 of our men unnecessarily," he
said. "If I have a chance to meet him on Friday, I will tell him to his
face."
-
- Rob Kelly, the father of the youngest Briton killed in
Iraq, Paratrooper Andrew Kelly, 18, said Mr Blair should reconsider
attending. Mr Kelly, a former submariner who fought in the Falklands
conflict, said: "Our Prime Minister put our country to war
unnecessarily, so what has he got to be thankful for?"
-
- Mr Kelly, from Saltash, Cornwall, has decided not to
attend the service because he wanted to grieve privately. He said: "I'm
still not convinced by our Prime Minister, especially with his speech at
the Labour Party conference. He mentions he made the right decision and
that people in Iraq are happy. That might be so, but we should've waited
to go with the United Nations."
-
- The families' criticisms will increase tension around
the event, after the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, expressed
his unease that it could become triumphalist. Dr Williams will read the
sermon. The Bishop of London, Richard Chartres, will lead prayers for
"penitence and reconciliation".
-
- � 2003 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd
-
- http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/story.jsp?story=450117
|
The
Mulindwas Communication Group "With Yoweri Museveni, Uganda is in
anarchy"
Groupe de communication Mulindwas "avec Yoweri Museveni, l'Ouganda est dans
l'anarchie"
|