A new book by British investigative
writer, Tom Bower has revealed in vivid details how former British Prime
Minister, Tony Blair has been making millions of dollars brokering
deals in many parts of the world. The book depicts Blair as a man
without morals who does not care a hoot about dirty deals, even with
dictators, so far it fattens his bank account.
Published today is an excerpt from the
book, Tony Blair: The Tragedy of Power. It reveals Blair’s contrasting
experience with two Nigerian leaders. Former President Goodluck
Jonathan was so mesmerised by Tony Blair’s charm that he gave Nigeria’s
$1billion Sovereign Wealth Fund to JP Morgan, a company that pays wages
to Blair.
Five years after, Blair met Jonathan’s
successor, Muhammadu Buhari, who was able to see through the
mercantilism and buccaneering facade of the former British prime
minister, described by Professor Olatunji Dare as ‘Phony Tony’ and
‘Tony Bliar’ in The Nation article titled: An Unwelcome visitor…
Here is the excerpt from Tom Bower’s book:
In May 2015, Blair flew to Nigeria to meet
the new president, Muhammadu Buhari, on a jet chartered by Evgeny
Lebedev, who owns the London Evening Standard with his father, a former
KGB colonel.
After a night at the Hilton Hotel, Blair called the following morning on the British High Commissioner.
Dropping in on British embassies had by
then become a familiar routine: in every country Blair visits, he
expects the embassy to provide him with a comprehensive security
briefing and occasionally even overnight accommodation.
But although he was advising sovereign
governments in ways that could conflict with British interests, no one
at Whitehall had dared to end this perk.
At the Nigerian
embassy, Blair was keen to discover more about the threat posed by Boko
Haram, the Islamic terror group murdering hundreds of civilians in the
north of the country.
Then, armed with the classified
information, he sped in a motor cavalcade to the president’s office. It
was their first meeting. Blair introduced himself grandly as ‘Britain’s
most successful Prime Minister’ and then launched into his practised
sales pitch.
‘I pioneered the skills to make government
work effectively,’ he told the president. ‘The Delivery Unit is the
leader’s weapon to make his government effective across the civil
service and country.’
He offered to establish a delivery unit within Buhari’s government, with paid staff. But the president — a former army general and military dictator famous for imprisoning his opponents without trial — looked bored.
He offered to establish a delivery unit
within Buhari’s government, with paid staff. But the president — a
former army general and military dictator famous for imprisoning his
opponents without trial — looked bored.
So did Lebedev, who had only come along because he was interested in Blair’s charity work fighting the Ebola virus.
‘Could you all leave us alone now?’ Blair announced suddenly. ‘I have a personal message for the president from David Cameron.’
But it was nothing of the kind.
Twenty minutes later, Buhari emerged looking noticeably disgruntled.
Blair, he told an aide, had used his access to tout for business on behalf of his private company, Tony Blair Associates.
Without so much as a blush, he had offered
to sell the president Israeli drones and other military equipment to
help defeat the Boko Haram uprising. ‘Blair is just after business,’
muttered Buhari.
During the drive back to the airport, the
local organiser for Blair’s AGI charity asked whether he was mixing
charity and business. ‘We don’t do business in Africa,’ Blair replied.
‘Don’t worry. Only AGI and charitable work. We only do business in the Middle East and Asia.’
Two weeks later, the local
AGI organiser called Buhari’s office to ask whether the president
wanted to go ahead with a delivery unit. He was rebuffed.
‘The president was not happy with Blair pushing the Israeli business,’ Buhari’s office warned him.
Anyone else might have desisted; not the eternally optimistic Blair.
Six weeks later, in
London, he met Bukola Saraki, the president of the Nigerian senate and
third most powerful person in the country.
This
time, as he discussed opportunities to introduce investors from the
Middle East to Nigeria, he was more successful. ‘We’d like that,’ said
Saraki — who was fully aware that Blair now also represented a wealth
fund based in Abu Dhabi.
While expanding his empire, Blair has also added greatly to the fortunes of his original employer, J.P. Morgan.
But having charmed the president and — in the words of Jonathan’s staff — satisfied his ego, Blair then introduced him to J.P. Morgan chief Jamie Dimon.The banker offered to manage Nigeria’s sovereign wealth fund — and Jonathan agreed. No other bank in the world was asked to tender for this profitable work
Back in 2010, he asked for a one-on-one
meeting with the then Nigerian president, Goodluck Jonathan — ostensibly
to offer the services of AGI and the Faith Foundation to help reconcile
the country’s Muslims and Christians.
Again, he was given an intelligence briefing by the British embassy in advance.
But having charmed the president and — in
the words of Jonathan’s staff — satisfied his ego, Blair then introduced
him to J.P. Morgan chief Jamie Dimon.
From Nigeria, Blair flew
with Dimon to Liberia, where he already had a charity AGI team in place
to advise the president. The upshot? J.P. Morgan invested in a
commercial project in Liberia.
*Blair’s reaction:
Last night a spokeswoman for Mr Blair said
the claim he used classified security information to tout for business
was ‘utterly without substance’.
She said Mr Blair’s work in Nigeria was
for his charities, adding: ‘He has never sought a business contract from
the government of Nigeria.
‘Yes, he certainly has had briefings on
Boko Haram. He is very interested in Boko Haram because it concerns
directly the work of his foundation which is about countering extremism.


No comments:
Post a Comment