The Mail on Sunday

Grotesque deeds that stained our democracy

Our man who helped expose UK torture f iles rages at...

- By IAN BIRRELL

A FEW days after the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi, I entered the ransacked residence of the British ambassador to Libya where I found scores of secret documents.

The floors were littered with paper that exposed how Tony Blair, desperate for a diplomatic triumph amid his unfolding disaster in Iraq, had turned over the UK state apparatus to appease a despotic regime.

I waded through documents from Downing Street, letters from top officials and confidenti­al security briefings that lay amid overturned board games and piles of domestic papers. The notes revealed Blair even aided Gaddafi’s son Saif with his dodgy PhD thesis.

Yet most depressing was the firm evidence that as well as sharing intelligen­ce-gathering techniques and assisting security goons infamous for barbarity, Britain was colluding in the illegal kidnapping and torture of terrorism suspects.

This was not just morally wrong. It also damaged our global standing, corroding Britain’s ‘soft power’ strength as a force for decency in the world, while torture has been shown time and again to deliver untrustwor­thy results since people can say anything to stop pain.

I even came across a 39- page dossier sent by British intelligen­ce –marked ‘UK Secret’ – packed with proposed questions for rebel leaders who were victims of an illicit rendition operation mounted with the help of MI6 to return them to Libya. This discovery came in September 2011. Since then, the disturbing extent of British ties to such activities under Blair have slowly seeped out, despite his then Foreign Secretary Jack Straw telling parliament there was ‘no truth’ in claims the UK was ‘involved in rendition’. Last week saw the shattering of Straw’s insoucianc­e with the release of forensic reports by par- liament’s intelligen­ce and security committee that show how British links to torture and rendition were worse than reported in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks.

This damning indictment came just weeks after Theresa May was forced to apologise for the UK’s role in the ‘appalling’ treatment of Abdel Hakim Belhaj and his wife.

They were grabbed in Thailand in 2004 – the same month as Blair’s ‘deal in the desert’ with Gaddafi – before being blindfolde­d, shackled and flown to Libya where Belhaj was tortured and sentenced to death. His pregnant wife was chained to a wall. Belhaj was leader of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, which sought to oust Gaddafi. His case proves our Government encouraged and i gnored despicable behaviour alongside the US in the so-called war on terror.

Yet those, such as Blair, who oversaw such deeds still strut the world pontificat­ing on good governance.

Belhaj also shows the lethal inconsiste­ncy of British foreign policy.

First our spooks paid his group to attempt assassinat­ion of Gaddafi in 1996. Then they helped the Libyan despot capture and interrogat­e his foe. Finally Belhaj ended up playing a key role in the liberation of Tripoli backed by British forces.

But this goes beyond diplomatic incompeten­ce. Our political masters sanctioned grotesque deeds that stained UK democracy and assisted actions of revolting cruelty.

That it has taken until now for Britain to face up to its misdeeds has added insult to injustice for those individual­s who paid the price in blood, pain and suffering for our leaders’ inhumanity.

 ??  ?? EXCLUSIVE: Ian Birrell, left, revealed in The Mail on Sunday in 2011, below, how far Tony Blair and Gaddafi, right, had cosied up
EXCLUSIVE: Ian Birrell, left, revealed in The Mail on Sunday in 2011, below, how far Tony Blair and Gaddafi, right, had cosied up
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