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Blair to Gaddafi: I Just Called to Say... 'Find a Safe Place'

© AP Photo / Alastair GrantLibyan leader Col. Moammar Gadhafi, at right, with Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair as they meet outside Tripoli, in Libya, Thursday, March, 25, 2004.
Libyan leader Col. Moammar Gadhafi, at right, with Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair as they meet outside Tripoli, in Libya, Thursday, March, 25, 2004. - Sputnik International
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Former British Prime Minister and Middle East Peace Envoy, Tony Blair told former Libyan leader Colonel Gaddafi to find a safe place to hide amid pro-democracy protests across Libya.

The latest round of emails by former US secretary of state Hilary Clinton, released under the US freedom of information legislation, contain details about the conversation between Blair and Gaddafi on 25 February 2011.

The world was watching Colonel Gaddafi's regime after security forces fired at crowds of pro-democracy protesters. The UN was drafting a resolution against "the gross and systematic violation of human rights" and Blair was making telephone calls.

"If you have a safe place to go then you should go there, because this will not end peacefully unless that happens and there has to be a process of change."

"That process of change can be managed and we have to find a way of managing it," said Blair.

The telephone call was transcribed by Blair's head of strategy, Catherine Rimmer, and sent to Jake Sullivan, a senior adviser to Hillary Clinton.

"If people saw the leader standing aside they would be content with that. If this goes on for another day/two days we will go past the point. I'm saying this because I believe it deeply. If we can't get a way through/out very quickly this will go past the point of no return."

But Blair's words fell on deaf ears. The UN Security Council froze Gaddafi's assets and referred his government to the International Criminal Court.

A month later France and Britain embarked on a military backed mission to overthrow Gaddafi who was eventually captured and killed during the Battle of Sirte — now a target site for Islamic State terrorists.

© AP Photo / Manu BraboContinuing their land grab across the Middle East, militants of the self-proclaimed Islamic State terrorist group have taken control of the hometown of former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.
Continuing their land grab across the Middle East, militants of the self-proclaimed Islamic State terrorist group have taken control of the hometown of former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi. - Sputnik International
Continuing their land grab across the Middle East, militants of the self-proclaimed Islamic State terrorist group have taken control of the hometown of former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.

Blair is also quoted in the email admitting "The US and the EU are in a tough position right now and I need to take something back to them which ensures this ends peacefully".

Since the 2011 invasion Libya has descended into chaos. Weapons used by rebel forced to overthrow Gaddafi are now in the hands of IS militants.

"The relationship between war and the rising challenge of refugees, immigrants and asylum seekers cannot be overstated," a Middle East expert Ramzy Baroud writes on website On Islam.

"It is both ironic and sad that the many thousands of refugees are seeking shelter in the same European and NATO countries that either directly (as in Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan) or indirectly (as in Syria) contributed to the destruction and destabilization of their countries," Baroud said.

Ninety percent of the boats used to smuggle migrants to Europe set sail from Libyan shores rammed with people desperate to find a safe place.

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