Enterprise-Record (Chico)

UK to probe fired Muslim lawmaker’s claim

- By Jill Lawless

LONDON » British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Monday ordered an investigat­ion into a Conservati­ve lawmaker’s claim that she was fired from a government job in part because of her Muslim faith — the latest allegation of wrongdoing that is shaking the Conservati­ve government and Johnson’s grip on power.

Former Transport Minister Nusrat Ghani says that when she was demoted in 2020, a government whip said her “Muslimness” was “making colleagues uncomforta­ble.” She told the Sunday Times that she was told “there were concerns ‘that I wasn’t loyal to the party as I didn’t do enough to defend the party against Islamophob­ia allegation­s.’”

Chief Whip Mark Spencer identified himself as the person who spoke to Ghani in 2020, but called her allegation “completely false.”

Johnson’s office said Monday that the prime minister had asked government officials “to establish the facts about what happened.” It said Johnson “takes these claims very seriously.”

Ghani was elected to Parliament in 2015 — the Conservati­ves’ first female Muslim lawmaker — and was made a junior minister in 2018. At the time her boss, then Transport Secretary Chris Grayling, said it was proof the Conservati­ves “were a party of opportunit­y.” But some have accused the party of failing to stamp out anti-Muslim prejudice under Johnson, who in 2018 compared women who wear face-covering veils to “letter boxes.”

Two senior Cabinet ministers, Health Secretary Sajid Javid and Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi, spoke in support of Ghani and said her claims must be investigat­ed.

“It takes a lot of bravery for someone to stand up and say: ‘My religion was taken into considerat­ion when I was being assessed for what I do as a job,’” Zahawi said. “That should never happen and there is no room for it.”

Ghani’s claim has deepened the rifts roiling Johnson’s governing party, wracked by allegation­s about lockdown-breaching parties in the prime minister’s office while Britain was under coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

The “partygate” allegation­s have infuriated many in Britain, who were barred from meeting up with friends and family for months in 2020 and 2021 to curb the spread of COVID-19. They are being investigat­ed by a senior civil servant, Sue Gray, whose report, expected this week, will be a pivotal moment for the prime minister.

Gray has interviewe­d Downing Street staff, looked at office records and Monday was speaking to Dominic Cummings, a former top Johnson aide who has become a loud critic of the prime minister since leaving Downing Street.

Ghani’s allegation comes after another Conservati­ve legislator, William Wragg, accused party whips of intimidati­ng and blackmaili­ng members of Parliament to ensure they supported the government.

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