Monday, July 6, 2026
ADVT 
International

New British PM Boris Johnson Has Close Indian Connection

Darpan News Desk IANS, 23 Jul, 2019 09:30 PM

    Set to be the new British Prime Minister, Boris Johnson has a close India connection. His estranged wife Marina Wheeler, whom he married in 1993, is half Indian.


    Wheeler is the niece of late editor and writer Khushwant Singh.


    Before they announced their separation last year after 25 years of marriage, Johnson had travelled several times to India with Marina. They have four children together.


    Johnson, who won the race within the Conservative Party to become the country's next Prime Minister, is expected to rely on his declared personal connect with Prime Minister Narendra Modi to deliver a "truly special" UK-India relationship.


    In his letter to the Indian diaspora Tory membership base, Johnson wrote that, during his meeting with Modi, he had stressed upon how India and UK were modern democracies and should work together to promote trade and prosperity. Johnson told Modi that the two nations should work closely to tackle the challenges that their countries face.


    The former Mayor of London and former Foreign Secretary, 55, has earlier referred to himself as the son-in-law of India.


    Marina's mother, Dip Singh, who is still alive, was married to Khushwant Singh's youngest brother, Daljit Singh.


    In a column for The Tribune, veteran journalist and Khuswant Singh's son Rahul Singh writes that Johnson visited the Ranthambore tiger reserve along with Marina and three of their children last year. During a family get-together, Rahul Singh got to meet Johnson.


    "Though I had met him once before in Mumbai some years earlier, this was the first time I got a chance to talk to him one-to-one, at some length. I was surprised that he knew so much about India and its politics. Should he become Britain's next PM, I think those Indian insights, thanks mainly due to his 25-years of marriage to Marina, however rocky it may have been, and personal visits to this country, should augur well for better Indo-British ties."


    However, Johnson is known to have made several gaffes, including some related to India.


    When he was Foreign Secretary, Johnson was berated at a Sikh gurdwara for talking about whiskey exports to India - despite alcohol being forbidden in the Sikh faith.


    With a saffron turban on his head, Johnson said in the Bristol gurdwara in 2017: "Whenever we go to India, to Mumbai or to Delhi, we have to bring 'clinkie' in our baggage.


    "We have to bring Johnnie Walker, we have to bring whiskey because as you may know there is duty of 150 per cent in India on imports of Scotch whiskey, so we have to bring it in duty free for our relatives. But imagine what we could do if there was a free trade deal with India - which there will be."


    A woman devotee reportedly angrily told Johnson: "How dare you talk about alcohol in a Sikh temple."


    In November 2014, as London mayor, Johnson suggested that countries that "haven't had the benefit of British rule" are now "less fortunate" - during a discussion on Winston Churchill.


    Johnson explained how he felt that Churchill would have been "very proud" at the "continuing legacy of Britain" in former colonies around the world.


    "He would have been very proud at the continuing legacy of Britain in those places around the world, and particularly I think he would have been amazed at India, the world's largest democracy, and a stark contrast with other less fortunate places that haven't had the benefit of British rule, if I can say this on the record.... why not? It's true, it's true," he said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    'FreeKarachi' Campaign Ads Appear On Leading US Newspaper

    'FreeKarachi' Campaign Ads Appear On Leading US Newspaper
    The 'Free Karachi' campaign has launched a new drive to raise global awareness over the plight of ethnic Mohajirs in Pakistan.

    'FreeKarachi' Campaign Ads Appear On Leading US Newspaper

    2 Pakistani Nationals Held For Supplying Suicide Vests In Afghanistan

    2 Pakistani Nationals Held For Supplying Suicide Vests In Afghanistan
    Two Pakistani nationals were arrested on charges of supplying suicide vests allegedly to the insurgents in Afghanistan's Nangarhar province on Tuesday.

    2 Pakistani Nationals Held For Supplying Suicide Vests In Afghanistan

    Community Upset After Former B.C. Mayor Charged With Numerous Sex Offences

    An Indigenous leader in central British Columbia says his community is angry and disheartened after its former mayor was charged with sex-related offences.

    Community Upset After Former B.C. Mayor Charged With Numerous Sex Offences

    Blast In UK Shop That Killed Indian-Origin Family Caused By Petrol

    Blast In UK Shop That Killed Indian-Origin Family Caused By Petrol
    An explosion in a Polish shop in Leicester that killed five people, including members of an Indian-origin family, was caused by petrol which was spread throughout the premises, a UK court was told on Monday.

    Blast In UK Shop That Killed Indian-Origin Family Caused By Petrol

    US Navy Veteran, Accused Of Killing Indian Techie, Could Plead Guilty

    US Navy Veteran, Accused Of Killing Indian Techie, Could Plead Guilty
    A US Navy veteran charged with killing an Indian techie and injuring two others in a racially motivated hate crime at a bar in Kansas City last year could enter into a plea deal, media reports have said.

    US Navy Veteran, Accused Of Killing Indian Techie, Could Plead Guilty

    British-Indian Family Banned From Taking Baby Girl To India For Circumcision

    British-Indian Family Banned From Taking Baby Girl To India For Circumcision
    A judge at Manchester County and Family Court ruled yesterday that the child, who will turn two this year, is at risk because religious and cultural pressure had overridden her mother's "maternal instinct".

    British-Indian Family Banned From Taking Baby Girl To India For Circumcision