Tony Blair pelted with eggs
NOT THERE FOR THE BOOK: Protest posters are seen as demonstraters protest outside of Eason bookshop in Dublin, Ireland as former British Prime Minister, Tony Blair, signs copies of his book '"A Journey" inside.
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Three people were arrested after protesters threw eggs and shoes at former Prime Minister Tony Blair when he arrived to sign copies of his memoir at a bookshop in Dublin on Saturday, national broadcaster RTE said.
No injuries were reported and the missiles did not hit Blair.
Some of the 200 activists who had gathered outside Eason, a bookstore on Dublin's main thoroughfare O'Connell street, clashed with police over a security barrier.
Security at Blair's first signing of his autobiography had been tight due to opposition by an Irish nationalist group opposed to British control of Northern Ireland and by critics of Blair's decision to join the war in Iraq.
Readers were not allowed to take photos or ask Blair to write any personal messages in the copies of his self-penned volume "A Journey," which describes what he called the "nightmare" that unfolded after the invasion of Iraq.
On RTE's "Late Late Show" on Friday, Blair said he stood by his decision on Iraq, adding that the military option should also not be ruled out to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.
"I still think this incidentally today that we have this fundamentalist, extremist threat that is based on the perversion of the religion of Islam but it's still there and we have to deal with it," Blair said.
Blair, who converted to Catholicism after quitting Downing Street and whose maternal grandparents were Protestant farmers in Ireland, played a central role in striking a peace deal in Northern Ireland in 1998.
- Reuters
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