Demonstrators wearing Tony Blair masks and sporting fake blood on their hands are escorted by police as they carry a fake coffin outside the QE2 centre in central London. Blair said Friday he had no regrets about removing Saddam Hussein after delivering a robust defence of the 2003 invasion of Iraq at a public inquiry into the war.
(AFP/Shaun Curry)
Demonstrators' placards can be seen, backdropped by heavy British police presence, outside the venue of the Iraq Inquiry in London, on the day Britain's former Prime Minister Tony Blair gave his testimony, Friday, Jan. 29, 2010. An unrepentant Tony Blair defended his decision to join the United States in attacking Iraq, arguing Friday before a British panel investigating the war that the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks made the threat of weapons of mass destruction impossible to ignore.
(AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
A man wears an Iraq protest t-shirt as he walks past British police officers outside the venue of the Iraq Inquiry in London, on the day Britain's former Prime Minister Tony Blair spoke, Friday, Jan. 29, 2010. An unrepentant Tony Blair defended his decision to join the United States in attacking Iraq, arguing Friday before a panel investigating the war that the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks made the threat of weapons of mass destruction impossible to ignore.
(AP Photo/Matt Dunham)
A demonstrator wearing a mask of Britain's former Prime Minister Tony Blair, waves red stained hands through the bars of a makeshift jail during a protest outside the Iraq Inquiry, in London, January 29, 2010. Protesters chanting "Tony Blair, war criminal" gathered outside the London inquiry into the Iraq War on Friday where the former British Prime Minister was to publicly explain his reasons for the 2003 invasion.
REUTERS/Luke Macgregor (BRITAIN - Tags: POLITICS CIVIL UNREST CONFLICT)