Tuesday, April 30, 2024 | Shawwal 20, 1445 H
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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Further blow to May as aid minister’s future in doubt

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LONDON: British aid minister Priti Patel was forced to cut short a foreign trip on Wednesday to answer questions over undisclosed meetings with Israeli officials, posing a new test of Prime Minister Theresa May’s authority as she negotiates Brexit.


Weakened by losing her party’s majority in a June election, May faces another crisis after her defence minister resigned in a sexual harassment scandal, leaving the government with “the stench of death” to it, according to an opposition lawmaker.


Patel, a Brexit campaigner who is popular in the governing Conservative Party, was heading back to London after cancelling meetings on a planned trip to Africa to respond to media reports that she failed to declare meetings with Israeli officials in a breach of diplomatic protocol.


Asked whether Patel should be dismissed, the new defence secretary, Gavin Williamson, told reporters in Brussels: “The prime minister makes her own decision on actually who is serving in her cabinet, and they’re only the prime minister’s decisions.”


Under British protocol, a cabinet minister would normally organise meetings through the foreign office and be accompanied by officials, and visits with Israelis would typically be balanced with meetings with Palestinians. Patel was also reported to have visited the Golan Heights, territory disputed between Israel and Syria, which British officials tend to avoid. Whether Patel is sacked or not, the scandal is the latest to rattle May, who is dependent on the support of a small Northern Irish party in parliament to make laws — increasingly important as Britain navigates its departure from the European Union.


She lost close ally Michael Fallon, her defence secretary, last week, and her deputy Damian Green and another minister are under investigation as part of the sexual harassment scandal in parliament.


On Tuesday, her foreign minister, Boris Johnson, was pressed to apologise over remarks he made about a jailed aid worker in Iran. Opposition lawmakers are openly questioning whether May has the strength to continue as prime minister. — Reuters


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