Daily Mail

SHAMEFUL CASE EXPOSES HYPOCRISY OF BLAIR YEARS

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Wby Stephen Glover heN New Labour came to power in 1997, it trumpeted what it grandly called an ‘ethical foreign policy’. Its most vocal champion was the foreign secretary, robin Cook. Mr Cook asserted that he ‘would make Britain a force for good in the world’ and promised that New Labour’s foreign policy would have ‘an ethical dimension’ and promote democratic rights.

Some of us were pretty suspicious as to whether foreign affairs could be sensibly conducted on this basis, but few of us in our wildest dreams imagined that an ‘ ethical foreign policy’ would turn out to be so stupendous­ly unethical.

A probably illegal war in Iraq, the wooing of the monstrous leader of Libya, Muammar Gaddafi, and British associatio­n with torture are just some examples of Labour’s supposedly enlightene­d foreign policy.

On Thursday, a high Court ruling revealed a shameful case which in some ways surpasses anything that has come before. It concerns the kidnapping of a young woman on a British street, and the subsequent connivance of the Labour government in this unlawful act.

Sheikh Mohammed al-Maktoum, the billionair­e ruler of Dubai and a close UK ally, ordered his henchmen to abduct his runaway daughter Princess Shamsa, then 19, from Cambridge in August 2000. The princess later described how she had been grabbed by armed bodyguards, injected with sedatives and taken to Dubai, where she was tortured. She has not been seen in public since her abduction.

The British government was seemingly unaware of what had taken place. But when Cambridges­hire police launched a criminal investigat­ion the following year, the Foreign Office (with Mr Cook in charge) allegedly shut it down as a diplomatic favour.

That was only one astounding revelation thrown up by the court case. It also emerged that Sheikh Mohammed much later kidnapped another daughter, and left the youngest of his six wives in fear of her life after discoverin­g her relationsh­ip with a British bodyguard. Not a nice man.

how could Mr Cook – a decent enough person, I think – have so jettisoned his principles that he was prepared to turn a blind eye to such an appalling act involving a defenceles­s young woman?

Was prime minister Tony Blair, a much more ruthless character, party to the decision? It is hard to believe he wasn’t, given his political dominance at the time. Mr Blair, by the way, removed Mr Cook as foreign secretary, demoting him to leader of the Commons in June 2001.

These are just some of the questions that must be answered by a proper inquiry into the affair. This is a scandal. It must not be brushed under the carpet and forgotten, along with the other foreign policy abominatio­ns of the Blair years.

I accept, of course, that we live in a fallen world, and must deal with regimes we don’t much like in order to safeguard

Britain’s national self-interest. During nearly four decades we have sold billions of pounds worth of armaments to Saudi Arabia, an authoritar­ian regime which is guilty of innumerabl­e human rights abuses.

Neighbouri­ng Dubai is part of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), and a major US naval base. Although in 2000 the attack on the World Trade Centre had not yet happened and the subsequent Middle Eastern conflagrat­ion set in train, the UAE was already a valued western ally.

Moreover, the UAE has for many years been a significan­t investor in the UK, and an important trading partner. Long before this week’s shocking High Court ruling, it was clear that Sheikh Mohammed’s regime was about as far as is possible from being a beacon of democracy. So, yes, I’m afraid we have to hold our noses and do business with countries like the UAE. That is why New Labour’s ethical foreign policy was so much humbug. Messrs Blair and Cook were perfectly aware of the nature of the people they were supping with. But there are limits. No self- respecting government with any notion of decency can ignore foreign thugs abducting an innocent young woman in broad daylight.

Sheikh Mohammed al-Maktoum can behave like that in his own benighted country, if he must. But when he starts throwing his weight around our streets, and flouting the rule of law, that really is time for the British government to take action, even if there are some disagreeab­le consequenc­es.

An investigat­ion into what happened would not just illuminate the hypocrisy and double-dealing of New Labour. It would also shine a light into some pretty rotten recesses of the British foreign policy and security establishm­ent.

Speaking for myself, I’ve never had the slightest wish to visit Dubai, with its soulless skyscraper­s and ugly temples of Mammon. Now wild horses would not drag me to Sheikh Mohammed’s depressing patch of land. I hope British visitors who venture there know where they are headed.

‘This is a scandal. It must not be forgotten’

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