The BBC mocks the British Treasury Secretary

  • Minister Sunak is being ridiculed.

    A.F.B.

  • Navabi likened Prince Charles to a minister if he was brown.

    A.F.B.

picture

The BBC found itself in an embarrassing situation, when a comedian on a radio program mocked the Treasury Secretary, Rishi Sunak, and the presenter of the program, Tom Price, gave a raging laugh, when a comedian hosted by the radio described the minister as "not representing most people blacked out." Some considered it racial discrimination.

Comedian Laila Navabi mocked Sonak for launching a special coin to celebrate the diversity of the British population. The comedian continued to mock him, claiming that “Rishi Sonak represents many things to us as a society, not least of which Prince Charles would look like if his face was brown.”

The Minister of the Interior, Sajid Javid, stormed the arena of debate, saying, "It's the kind of thing that I expect to hear from trolls on (Twitter), not on (BBC)."

"The BBC should celebrate diversity, not sow division, and I hope it will think of greater interest in the future," he added.

Sonak, 40, who was born in Hampshire to Hindu parents, celebrated last week the launch of a new 50-pence coin, written on it "Variety built Britain" - but Navabi, 21, dismissed it as a "big empty gesture." And "an indication that the credit is due to him."

A BBC spokesman, justifying the comedian’s mockery, said: “In this case, we believe that the comedian, who was a guest on the program, thinks that Prince Charles and the minister have a passing similarity.”

These mockery came days after the cyber attacks on Sonak, the former banker, who married a wealthy family working in iron and steel, and senior Conservative Party leaders set out to defend him, as Secretary of State James Cleverley tweeted: “The left really does not like people of color to be successful. , is not it".

Follow our latest local and sports news, and the latest political and economic developments via Google news