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Britain: Cash for access scandal dogs Blairs Middle
East envoy
By Peter Reydt
1 May 2002
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Over the last weeks there have been allegations that the multi-millionaire
businessman Lord Levy has been paid up to £250,000 over
a three year period, by the Australian shopping-centre group Westfield
to provide access to ruling circles in Britain. Levy claims the
payments were for business consultancy regarding Westfields
expansion drive in Britain and not for political access.
Levy is a key player within the government. He is often described
as Labours chief fundraiser and has procured millions in
donations for Prime Minister Tony Blairs private office.
He also acts as Blairs personal envoy to the Middle East.
Coinciding with his three-year service for the company, he made
45 trips to 19 countries in the Middle East.
There were accusations that Lord Levy did not register his
income from Westfield. But it was subsequently reported that his
contract with the company was terminated the day before new rules
concerning the registration of peers were enacted, enabling Levy
to claim he has done nothing wrong legally. This is not the first
time that Levy has been accused of financial wrongdoing. In 2000
he came under criticism for his tiny tax bill of just £5,000
during one tax year. At that time as well, legally Lord Levy had
done nothing wrong.
A public discussion over the question of whether what Levys
conduct was legally above aboard, or even whether he was giving
access to politicians or not becomes almost a side issue, however.
Once again, the degree to which Labour has become enmeshed
with big business figures has been vividly demonstratedadding
to the pervading stench of corruption emanating from a government
many already believe is for sale to the highest bidder. The timing
of this latest scandal is especially bad for Blair, since there
has been a string of allegations of political favouritism involving
Labour Party donors.
On the question of providing access, moreover, whatever he
might say, having Lord Levy on the books automatically provides
contacts with the highest echelons of governmentfor these
are the circles in which he mixes.
The head of Westfields UK arm, Peter Allen, admitted
freely that the company regards access to governing circles as
essential for their plans to expand in Britain. Allan has said
that he has been to different Labour Party events at Downing
Street, and that the company spends a long time working
with local authorities and central government in terms of building
and developing relationships, which should bode well in getting
planning permission.
He told an undercover investigative reporter, Im
developing relationships with ministers within the DTI (Department
of Trade and Industry) and other departments on a one-to-one basis.
A relationship in the UK comes down to my influence with the central
government.
What has been given less attention is the question of what
Lord Levys leading political role reveals about Labour policy
in the Middle East. Levy is a prominent Zionist who counts
former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak as his personal friend
and tennis partner. He is a leading member of such organisations
as the Jewish Agency and the Joint Israel Appeal. Levy also has
a business and a house in Israel and his son worked for the former
Israeli justice minister under Barak.
Even if his business practices are impeccable, the media virtually
ignored the obvious question: what is a man whose political outlook
is so clearly pro-Zionist doing as a special envoy to the region?
After all the Blair government claims to be impartial and even
handed in Israels conflict with the Palestinians.
There has been only one serious article on the relationship
between Levys appointment as Blairs Middle East envoy
and Labours tacit support for Israelby John Pilger,
entitled, Blairs disguised support for Sharon and
the Zionist project, reprinted in the New Statesman
January 14, 2002.
Pilger claims that British support for Israel repression has
accelerated under Blair and he backs this up by hard facts. Last
year alone, the government approved 91 arms export licences to
Israel, in categories that included ammunition, bombs, torpedoes,
rockets, missiles, combat vessels, military electronic and imaging
equipment and armoured vehicles.
The article notes that according to the authoritative Janes
Foreign Report, Britain and France had given the green
light to Sharon to attack Arafat if the Palestinian resistance
did not stop. The British government was shown a plan for an all-out
Israeli invasion and reoccupation of the West Bank and Gaza using
the latest F-16 and F-15 jets against all the main installations
of the Palestinian Authority [and] 30,000 men or the equivalent
of a full army.
According to the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, the British
Labour Party took a full-page advertisement in the Jewish Chronicle
last year to boast of its support for Israel. The advertisement
read, Since 1997 a record 57 Labour MPs have visited Israel,
mostly with Labour Friends of Israel, swelling the number of MPs
willing to ensure balance on the Middle East in the House of Commons.
More Labour MPs have visited Israel than from any other party.
The advertisement explained, Trade between Britain and
Israel has grown incredibly by 20 percent, while there have been
34 official trade missions to Israel from the UK since 1997. The
unique BRITECH agreement means there is now a £15.5 million
joint fund to encourage cooperation between British and Israeli
hi-tech industries in research and development for their own benefit.
Blair has stood by Lord Levy, not simply because he is a cash
cow for the party who can rake-in millions due to his business
connections, but because his Mideast role sends a signal to the
Israeli government, Britain and Israels main ally, the Bush
administration in the United States, as well as many of Labours
key financial backers who are to be found amongst the highest
echelons of British Zionism, that Britain will not stand in the
way of Sharons offensive against the Palestinians, whatever
its occasional public criticisms.
See Also:
European governments give Sharon a free
hand against the Palestinians
[16 April 2002]
Britain: Scandal over Mittals
donation to Labour reveals sharp divisions within establishment
[27 February 2002]
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