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Tony Blair resists calls to axe multimillion dollar Saudi deal following the murder of Jamal Khashoggi

Tony Blair resists calls to axe multimillion dollar Saudi deal following the murder of Jamal Khashoggi
PoliticsPolitics4 min read

tony blair

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Tony Blair.

  • Exclusive: Tony Blair urged to scrap his multimillion-dollar deal with Saudi Arabia following the murder of Jamal Khashoggi.
  • The former UK prime minister's Global Change organisation has signed a deal with the desert kingdom to help modernise and "support the change programme" in the country.
  • The former Labour leader is refusing to suspend the deal despite Saudi Arabia's role in the death of Khashoggi and continued war in Yemen.
  • Blair said earlier this month that the Saudis had "issued a very strong denial" of their responsibility.
  • Labour MP Lloyd Russell Moyle said Blair would be "complicit in war crimes and murder" of Saudi Arabia if he didn't terminate the deal.

LONDON - Tony Blair has been accused of being "complicit" in crimes committed by the Saudi government, after resisting calls to cut his ties to the country following the murder of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

It was revealed earlier this year that the former UK prime minister's Institute for Global Change had signed a multimillion-dollar deal with the Saudi government in order to "support the change programme" in the country.

However, the murder of Khashoggi in the Turkish embassy earlier this month, plus Saudi Arabia's ongoing war in Yemen, have led to calls for Blair to axe all ties to the Saudi regime.

Asked whether Blair would continue to work with the Saudi regime following Khashoggi's murder, a spokesperson for the institute told Business Insider: "We have nothing further to add to what Mr Blair has said previously."

Asked about Khashoggi's death earlier this month, Blair told Reuters that it was "extremely troubling" and risked undermining the "process of modernisation" in the country but noted that the Saudis had "issued a very strong denial" of their responsibility.

A source close to Blair told BI that the institute is "following events closely" in the country.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has called on Western leaders to cut ties with Saudi Arabia in response to Khashoggi's killing.

"The issues that have come to light of the death in Istanbul of a Saudi national who was visiting the embassy call into question the close relationship with Saudi Arabia of so many Western countries," Corbyn told CNN.

One ally of Corbyn told BI that Blair's reluctance to cut his ties to the regime was "absolutely immoral" and made him "complicit in war crimes," committed by the Saudis in Yemen.

Meanwhile, Labour MP Lloyd Russell Moyle told BI that Blair's reluctance to cut his ties to the regime was "absolutely immoral" and made him "complicit in war crimes," committed by the Saudis in Yemen.

"If Mr Blair doesn't see the light and continues to accept money from the Saudis then I think his moral integrity is in ruins," the MP for Brighton Kemptown told BI.

He added: "Our own government is reviewing their relationship with Saudi Arabia and if others are not doing the same then they are complicit in war crimes and murder."

Tony Blair

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In a statement published in September, the institute said that "Tony Blair believes that [Saudi Arabia's] modernisation programme is the single most important development in the Middle East in terms of governance and will be vital for peace," in the region.

However, Russell-Moyle said Blair's belief that the Saudi regime was modernising was "delusional" and said the former Labour leader's continued involvement in the Middle East was now a "danger" to peace in the region.

"I can't think of one good thing he has done in the Middle East and it would be better for the world if he stayed out of the region because he is a danger in that area," he said.

In a statement to BI, a spokesperson for the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change said: "TBI is a not for profit organisation and all the money received goes to support this work.

"Tony Blair receives no personal remuneration from the Institute."

They added: "Donations made to the Institute are used to fund our partnerships with 14 African governments where we work to deliver better living standards and job opportunities for their people and the Middle East, where we promote religious co-existence, modernisation and reform and support a regional solution to the peace process."

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