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Britain's ex-Foreign Secretary Robin Cook passes away
Pakistan Times
Foreign Desk Report

LONDON (UK): Britain's ex-Foreign Secretary RobiBritain's former Foreign Secretary Robin Cook speaks during a press conference in London in this Monday, Aug. 24, 1998. [File Photo]n Cook, who quit Prime Minister Tony Blair's government in protest over the Iraq war, died Saturday after collapsing on a Scottish mountain.

Scotland's Northern Constabulary said Cook collapsed on Ben Stack mountain in the Scottish Highlands. He was taken by coast guard helicopter to a hospital in Inverness, where he was pronounced dead.

Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott, filling in for a vacationing Blair, said Cook was "the greatest parliamentarian of his generation."

"He also made an enormous contribution to British politics in opposition and in government," Prescott said.

Michael Howard, leader of the main opposition Conservative Party, said Cook's political contribution had been "immense."

"He was a politician of principle who fought hard for the things he believed in," Howard said.

Jack Straw, Cook's successor as foreign secretary, said he was "devastated."

"Robin and I had been good friends for nearly 30 years and that friendship survived our policy disagreements over Iraq," Straw said. "He was the greatest parliamentarian of his generation and a very fine foreign secretary. I deeply mourn his loss."

Cook served as foreign minister in 1997-2001 before being demoted to leader of the House of Commons. His resignation speech, days before the Iraq war began in March 2003, received a rare standing ovation from lawmakers.

"Why is it now so urgent that we should take military action to disarm a military capacity that has been there for 20 years, and which we helped to create?" he said.

Renowned as an intelligent lawmaker and skilled debater, Cook remained a high-profile figure despite his withdrawal from government, and he became an increasingly vocal opponent of Blair's policies.

Some supporters believed Cook should have been leader of the Labour Party. But opponents saw him as arrogant and distant.

Lawmaker since 1974


A lawmaker since 1974, Cook — a short, bearded redhead — declined to oppose Blair when he was elected Labour leader in 1994, declaring: "I am not good-looking enough."

Instead, Cook accepted the post of foreign secretary following the landslide election victory that made Blair prime minister in 1997.

But his promise of an "ethical dimension" to British foreign policy often came back to haunt him, particularly after he sanctioned the sale of 16 Hawk jet fighters to Indonesia in 1999, despite the country's widely criticized human rights record in East Timor.

Another diplomatic miscalculation came during a trip to India and Pakistan, when he suggested that Britain could mediate any negotiations over the Kashmir dispute.

Cook was praised by many for his tough-minded handling of the 1999 Kosovo crisis, but that and other successes were partly overshadowed by the scandal of ending his 28-year marriage to his wife, Margaret, at an airport as they were about to leave on vacation.

Warned by Downing Street that a tabloid newspaper was about to disclose his long-standing affair with his secretary Gaynor Regan, Cook immediately told Margaret he was leaving her. Margaret Cook wrote a book accusing her former husband of being a drunk and a depressive.

She said his intelligence and ability were unmatched, but he had "absolutely no natural courtesy or sympathy."

Cook, who later married Regan, shifted to the right of the party under Blair's leadership but gravitated back to the left following his demotion, earning a reputation as a leading Cabinet "dove" opposed to invading Iraq without a U.N. mandate.

Ally of Treasury chief Gordon Brown


An ally of Treasury chief Gordon Brown, Cook had been tipped to return to Cabinet should Brown succeed Blair as Labour leader, as many predict.

On Saturday, Brown praised Cook's "incisive mind, forensic skills and formidable and wide-ranging debating prowess."

"A strong European, a committed internationalist, and a distinguished foreign secretary with friends in every country, he will be mourned greatly not only by his family, friends, colleagues and constituents, but in every continent of the world," Brown said.

Cook is survived by his wife and two sons from his first marriage.

TIMES Group
Shocked


TIMES Group of Publications
, Pakistan which disseminates news and views—the world-over via its three independent e-Newspapers, ‘Pakistan Times’, ‘Kashmir Tribune’ [English] as well as ‘Daur-e-Jadeed [Urdu] with every sunup—has expressed deep angst over the demise of Mr. Robin Cook.

Via an electronic message, the Chairman of the TIMES Group of Publications Mumtaz Hamid Rao said on Saturday that he had lost a marvellous friend who always took keen interest in promoting the excellent friendly ties between UK and Pakistan.

His services for the Kashmir Cause—in line with the aspirations of the people of the Himalayan State of Jammu & Kashmir shall be indexed with adore in the history of struggle for freedom in Kashmir, Rao said by adding; ‘the death of Robin Cook, whom I met for the first time with the leader of Opposition in Azad Kashmir Assembly Barrister Sultan Mehmood in Islamabad, is a personal tragedy for me.’

‘This interaction eventually turned into a personal friendship with a brilliant lawmaker of the Great Britain’, the TIMES Group chief said and added; ‘in the death of Robin Cook, the majestic empire of UK has lost an upright parliamentarian—par excellence.’

‘His sweet memoirs shall be remembered—for all times to come.’

While expressing inmost condolences on behalf of his colleagues in the TIMES Group, Rao expressed deep sympathies with the bereaved family and the fans of Robin Cook—both inside and outside the House of Commons—the British Parliament and prayed for peace for the departed soul.●

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