Iraqi-born British MP will donate pay rise to charity

Nadhim Zahawi, right, with David Cameron, said he would ‘look at’ donating his pay rise to a charity in his local constituency Stratford-upon-Avon. (Getty Images)
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Updated 09 October 2020
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Iraqi-born British MP will donate pay rise to charity

  • ‘I don’t think a pay rise is appropriate. It’s a privilege in many ways to serve your country’
  • Plan to increase MPs’ salary met with public fury amid hardships caused by pandemic

LONDON: Iraqi-born British parliamentarian Nadhim Zahawi has criticized plans for MPs to receive a £3,300 ($4,278) pay rise, and confirmed to Arab News that he will donate his to a charity in his local constituency Stratford-upon-Avon.

“I don’t think a pay rise is appropriate,” the Conservative MP told Sky News. “I think it’s a privilege in many ways to serve your country.”

British MPs’ annual salary currently stands at £81,932. The increase would push it over £85,000. 

Most ministers — those chosen by the prime minister to carry out additional executive responsibilities — earn an additional sum on top of the baseline salary.

But Zahawi is one of the few ministers who take on additional responsibilities without further compensation.

Despite this, he confirmed to Arab News that he would be donating the increase to charity, and said it is "likely" that the money would go to the Shakespeare Hospice, where he has sent previous salary increases.

Andrew Thomson, a head chef at a local Stratford-upon-Avon restaurant, said he welcomes his local MP’s donation.

“It’s nice to hear,” Thomson told Arab News, calling the pay rise for MPs “ridiculous at a time when people are losing their jobs.”

He added: “The people who deserve pay rises are those who work in the NHS (National Health Service) and supermarkets — the people who kept the country going while everyone sat at home.”

News of the planned pay rise has been met with public fury, with many pointing to the economic hardships that significant portions of the British population are experiencing due to the coronavirus pandemic.


Nepalese royalists demand monarchy restoration ahead of March elections

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Nepalese royalists demand monarchy restoration ahead of March elections

Katmandu: Supporters of Nepal’s deposed royal family rallied in the capital on Sunday demanding the restoration of the monarchy ahead of March elections.
It was the first rally by supporters of ousted King Gyanendra since a wave of violent demonstrations by disgruntled youth in September installed an interim government that set fresh parliamentary elections in March.
“We love our king. Bring back the king,” the rally participants chanted around the statue of King Prithvi Narayan Shah, who started the Shah dynasty in the 18th century. The last Shah king — Gyanendra — was forced to step down and the monarchy was abolished in 2008, making Nepal a republic.
“The last and only alternative for this country is king and monarchy only” said protester Samrat Thapa. “In the present context and the path country has taken after the Gen Z movement, there needs to be monarchy restored to manage the situation.”
Sunday marks the birth anniversary of Prithvi Narayan and the annual rally in the past has turned violent with clashes between demonstrators and police. Two people were killed during a pro-king rally last March. Sunday’s gathering was peaceful as riot police kept a close watch on the event.
Nepal’s royal family still enjoys significant support.
The interim government, headed by Nepal’s first female prime minister, Sushila Karki, a retired Supreme Court judge, took over following protests by Gen Z activists complaining of corruption, lack of opportunities, employment and poor governance. They were triggered by the previous government’s short-lived ban on social media.
Karki has been criticized for dragging her feet in filing corruption cases.