Outrage as Save the Children give Tony Blair the Global Legacy Award

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Outrage as Save the Children give Tony Blair the Global Legacy Award

Former Labour leader Tony Blair, who is currently a key focus of a public inquiry into Britain’s invasion of Iraq, received the Global Legacy Award on Wednesday night at a star-studded gala hosted by the Save the Children charity in New York.

RT reports: Save the Children’s decision to offer Blair the award has provoked outrage across the UK, with critics insisting the move utterly discredits the charity.

Blair was honored with Save The Children’s ‘Global Legacy Award’ in supposed recognition of his vanguard leadership on the world’s international development stage.

While serving Britain as prime minister, he formally committed the country to allocating 0.7 percent of its GDP to overseas aid. His administration also founded the Department for International Development (DFID).

Following the announcement of Blair’s award at the Illumination Gala in New York’s Plaza Hotel, he fraternized with Hollywood celebrities such as Ben Affleck, Jennifer Garner and Dakota Fanning.

Speaking at the gala, Blair said: “From the beginning of humankind there has been brutality, conflict, intrigue, the destructive obsession with a narrow self-interest.

“But throughout all human history, never has been extinguished that relentless, unquenchable desire to do good. To act not only in self-interest and sometimes to even to act in defiance of it.”

Outrage as Save the Children give Tony Blair the Global Legacy Award

The former prime minister is central to Sir John Chilcot’s inquiry into Britain’s controversial and protracted war in Iraq. UK MPs, campaigners and citizens have long argued that the brutal war divided Britain and blackened Blair’s decade-long leadership.

Damning allegations relating to Blair’s role as Middle East envoy and businesses dealings with autocratic rulers and others in the region have also been levelled.

Earlier this month, it emerged that Blair had signed a multimillion pound contract with a Saudi Arabian oil company in 2010 to broker secret deals on the firm’s behalf with Chinese state officials.

The revelation raised serious questions over the former PM’s diplomatic role as Middle East envoy, and his personal vested interests in the region.

When news of the covert deal surfaced, Oliver Miles, a former UK ambassador to Libya who has called for Blair to be removed from his role as Middle East peace envoy, said the former prime minister should disclose his financial interests in the region.

Earlier this year, Blair managed to successfully quash a Serious Fraud Office investigation into alleged corruption regarding an arms deal with Saudi Arabia.

In July, a former political associate of Blair’s suggested his role in advising the Egyptian government was highly convenient.

The former prime minister could battle the threat of Islamism on the one hand, he told the Guardian, and sink his teeth into “mouth-watering business opportunities” in return for Bush-era advocacy on the other.

Incensed by the revelation of Blair’s award, UK citizen Joe Cook said the charity’s decision to honor him in this regard was “horrendous, diabolical and absurd.”

Another Briton took to Twitter to demand Save the Childen revoke the award, arguing the former prime minister was “the world’s biggest criminal.”

Niamh Harris
About Niamh Harris 14895 Articles
I am an alternative health practitioner interested in helping others reach their maximum potential.