Skip to main content

NEWS: Trump UK visit to go ahead despite criticism of London mayor: foreign minister

British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said on Tuesday he saw no reason to cancel Donald Trump's state visit to Britain after the U.S. president criticized Mayor Sadiq Khan's response to the London Bridge killings.

Trump has lambasted Khan on Twitter, accusing him of making a "pathetic excuse", for saying Londoners should not be alarmed by the sight of additional police on the streets of the British capital after Saturday's attack that killed seven people.


"The invitation has been issued and accepted and I see no reason to change that, but as far as what Sadiq Khan has said about the reassurances he's offered the people of London, I think he was entirely right to speak in the way he did," Johnson said in a BBC radio interview when asked whether Trump's state visit should be canceled.

No date has been set for the visit, which was agreed during Prime Minister Theresa May's visit to Washington in January.

"I don't wish to enter into a row between those two individuals who are I think are probably perfectly able to stick up for themselves," Johnson said of Trump and Khan.

May has said Khan is doing a good job, echoing public sentiment across London.

Khan, the first Muslim elected as London's mayor, and Trump have been at odds since Khan was strongly critical of Trump's election campaign pledge to impose a temporary ban on Muslims entering the United States. Since taking office, Trump has ordered temporary travel restrictions on people from several Muslim-majority countries, although the ban is currently held up by federal courts.

Asked if he would like Trump's visit to be called off, in an interview with Channel 4 News on Monday evening, Khan said his position toward Trump remained the same.

"I don't think we should roll out the red carpet to the president of the USA in the circumstances where his policies go against everything we stand for," Khan said.

Former Democratic U.S. presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, defeated by Trump last November, praised Khan's performance in dealing with the London attacks.

"It is time for steady, determined leadership like we are seeing from London's mayor and local authorities," Clinton said at a fundraising event on Monday, according to The Washington Examiner. She did not mention Trump by name, but she said it was "not the time to lash out, to incite fear and use trash talk and terror for political gain."

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

News: Restructuring for A United and Progressive Nigeria

By Atiku Abubakar (Former Vice President, FRN) Let me begin with a rhetorical question: why do I, Atiku Abubakar, favour a restructured Nigeria? The answer is simple: because I am proudly Nigerian and favour a united Nigeria that offers every man, woman and child a brighter future where each and everyone has a chance to build and share in this great nation’s potential.

400 PEOPLE TO ENJOY FREE MEDICAL SURGERY IN OGUN STATE, NIGERIA

The free medical surgery would cover hernia, glaucoma, breast biopsy, burn excision/debridement and other diseases.