The Prague Post - UK PM promises cooperation with police 'partygate' probe

EUR -
AED 4.210954
AFN 75.676951
ALL 93.688539
AMD 417.78827
ANG 2.052741
AOA 1051.448663
ARS 1691.814967
AUD 1.639196
AWG 2.059612
AZN 1.949457
BAM 1.955745
BBD 2.297793
BDT 140.726049
BGN 1.969325
BHD 0.430244
BIF 3403.830329
BMD 1.146618
BND 1.474304
BOB 7.938991
BRL 5.823641
BSD 1.140852
BTN 109.825917
BWP 15.492837
BYN 3.289942
BYR 22473.709043
BZD 2.294495
CAD 1.611021
CDF 2590.20949
CHF 0.924254
CLF 0.026938
CLP 1060.185898
CNY 7.761229
CNH 7.760917
COP 3705.650899
CRC 517.991816
CUC 1.146618
CUP 30.385372
CVE 110.261904
CZK 24.195299
DJF 203.156727
DKK 7.475294
DOP 66.640352
DZD 152.48183
EGP 58.016795
ERN 17.199267
ETB 184.137504
FJD 2.56871
FKP 0.856868
GBP 0.847333
GEL 3.004818
GGP 0.856868
GHS 13.144631
GIP 0.856868
GMD 84.849186
GNF 10005.915984
GTQ 8.708755
GYD 238.833295
HKD 8.987569
HNL 30.551958
HRK 7.53546
HTG 149.119329
HUF 359.489929
IDR 20629.030313
ILS 3.424202
IMP 0.856868
INR 110.439418
IQD 1495.458015
IRR 1576599.486201
ISK 143.200664
JEP 0.856868
JMD 180.831373
JOD 0.812984
JPY 185.910891
KES 148.250797
KGS 100.271073
KHR 4610.156625
KMF 491.898901
KPW 1031.956105
KRW 1701.603871
KWD 0.35474
KYD 0.951273
KZT 537.584907
LAK 25790.418641
LBP 102162.180684
LKR 383.849223
LRD 207.194183
LSL 18.693481
LTL 3.385664
LVL 0.693578
LYD 7.309205
MAD 10.657401
MDL 20.056105
MGA 4850.81782
MKD 61.636226
MMK 2407.208117
MNT 4112.444707
MOP 9.217541
MRU 45.590875
MUR 53.924997
MVR 17.726217
MWK 1978.202281
MXN 19.951242
MYR 4.670286
MZN 73.280082
NAD 18.704975
NGN 1577.711921
NIO 41.984472
NOK 11.082548
NPR 175.621512
NZD 1.959513
OMR 0.440871
PAB 1.141568
PEN 3.885091
PGK 5.022968
PHP 70.683828
PKR 317.067701
PLN 4.325736
PYG 6919.460771
QAR 4.161783
RON 5.239012
RSD 117.362044
RUB 88.862105
RWF 1678.22834
SAR 4.305731
SBD 9.254767
SCR 16.924248
SDG 688.544405
SEK 11.004309
SGD 1.477486
SHP 0.856066
SLE 27.948825
SLL 24044.010555
SOS 651.9723
SRD 43.185636
STD 23732.67362
STN 24.485219
SVC 9.98872
SYP 126.738072
SZL 18.689739
THB 38.494289
TJS 10.525105
TMT 4.024629
TND 3.378005
TOP 2.760781
TRY 53.953528
TTD 7.748782
TWD 36.899883
TZS 3016.712522
UAH 51.060204
UGX 4217.881582
USD 1.146618
UYU 45.93871
UZS 13798.612599
VES 831.11422
VND 30109.610338
VUV 137.939592
WST 3.16921
XAF 655.526968
XAG 0.019968
XAU 0.000284
XCD 3.098792
XCG 2.057342
XDR 0.815265
XOF 655.526968
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.347314
ZAR 18.738642
ZMK 10320.948629
ZMW 20.780368
ZWL 369.210466
  • CMSC

    0.0100

    22.1

    +0.05%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    67.35

    0%

  • BCC

    1.9000

    75.99

    +2.5%

  • BP

    -0.0700

    41.33

    -0.17%

  • NGG

    -0.5000

    82.91

    -0.6%

  • GSK

    0.2000

    51.45

    +0.39%

  • BTI

    0.5300

    58.73

    +0.9%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    21.6

    +1.85%

  • AZN

    3.8700

    168.37

    +2.3%

  • RIO

    0.3300

    93.62

    +0.35%

  • CMSD

    0.0550

    22.385

    +0.25%

  • RELX

    0.8600

    33.51

    +2.57%

  • JRI

    -0.0465

    13

    -0.36%

  • RYCEF

    0.0900

    18.72

    +0.48%

  • VOD

    -0.4800

    15.08

    -3.18%

UK PM promises cooperation with police 'partygate' probe
UK PM promises cooperation with police 'partygate' probe

UK PM promises cooperation with police 'partygate' probe

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Tuesday vowed to cooperate with police in any formal probe into coronavirus lockdown-breaking parties at Downing Street, which has deepened the threat to his position.

Text size:

"I welcome the Met's decision to conduct its own investigation because I believe this will give the public the clarity it needs and help draw a line under the matter," he told parliament.

Allegations that a string of parties were held at Downing Street while the rest of the country abided by the rules have shaken Johnson's government, prompting the worst crisis of his premiership and calls for him to quit.

London's Metropolitan Police have faced widespread criticism for refusing to investigate a steady drip of allegations over the last two years.

But Met commissioner Cressida Dick confirmed to the London Assembly that had now changed, raising the prospect of formal interviews and potentially criminal sanctions.

But she told the local authority: "The fact that we are now investigating does not of course mean that fixed penalty notices (fines) will necessarily be issued in every instance to every person involved."

If questioned, Johnson would be only the second sitting British prime minister to be quizzed as part of a formal police probe.

Labour prime minister Tony Blair was interviewed as a witness in a police investigation into "cash for honours" allegations. Police announced in 2007 that no charges would be brought.

A senior civil servant, Sue Gray, has already begun conducting an investigation into the "partygate" claims and is expected to publish her conclusions in the coming days.

Johnson's spokesman said her fact-finding work not related to the police investigation would continue.

"They (Gray and her team) won't publish anything that relates to the work of the police," he said, adding that Johnson "does not" think he broke the law during lockdown.

- Internal probe -

Gray's investigation is understood to include claims revealed on Monday night that Johnson broke lockdown rules by having a birthday party at Downing Street on June 19, 2020.

Up to 30 people were present, ITV News alleged. At the time, social gatherings were only permitted between six people outside.

Johnson -- Britain's populist Brexit architect -- has faced public outrage and charges of hypocrisy over the parties, given that millions of people abided by the rules he set.

Many highlighted how they missed significant birthdays themselves due to social distancing, and were unable to comfort sick and dying loved ones struck down with Covid.

A tweet from Johnson re-emerged from March 2020 in which he told a seven-year-old girl she was setting a "great example to us all" after she cancelled her birthday party.

London's Labour party mayor Sadiq Khan welcomed the police investigation.

"Members of the public must be able to expect the highest standards from everyone, including the prime minister and those around him," he added.

"No one is above the law. There cannot be one rule for the government and another for everyone else."

- Public confidence -

Dick declined to give a timeframe for the investigation or say whether the Met would be taking witness statements from police stationed at Downing Street.

She also refused to say whether police would be examining security camera footage from Downing Street, where Johnson has both an office and a residence.

Supporters of Johnson in his Conservative party have played down the latest revelations and the threat to his position, just over two years after a landslide election win.

Instead, they point to his success in securing Britain's exit from the European Union, and his work on securing vaccines to combat Covid-19.

But Jonathan Evans, the head of the Committee on Standards in Public Life, said recent government corruption and cronyism claims had the potential to undermine public trust.

He warned there could be a "political price to pay" if ministers and public servants ignored people's expectations of behaviour.

"People do care about it and they do expect those people who are representing them... to be maintaining high standards and to put the interests of the public first, rather than their own personal or political interests."

B.Barton--TPP