Protesters outside the QE2 centre had their own ideas about what fate should await Tony Blair after the long awaited Chilcot inquiry was released Times photographer Richard PohleThe Chilcot report raises the possibility that Tony Blair’s conduct amounted to the criminal offence of misconduct in public office, a former director of public prosecutions said yesterday. The Iraq inquiry found that to “provide the basis for a judgment of this magnitude and seriousness” Mr Blair made a ruling that Saddam Hussein had breached a UN resolution on… Lord Macdonald of River Glaven said it “seemed very likely” that the former prime minister had “roundly abused the trust placed in him by the public” and accused him of “twisting” the evidence and the law to take Britain to war.
Source: The Times July 06, 2016 23:04 UTC