Jeremy Hunt
may have replaced Boris Johnson as the UK's top diplomat, but it seems the
sight of a gaffe-prone British foreign secretary isn't about to disappear any
time soon.
Mr Hunt
marked the first day of his trip to China - where he hopes to strengthen trade
ties ahead of Brexit - by mistakenly telling his hosts his wife is Japanese,
rather than Chinese.
The foreign
secretary, who moved from his health brief to replace Mr Johnson earlier this
month, made the "terrible mistake" while meeting his Chinese
counterpart.
Exchanging
pleasantries as his UK delegation sat down to talks with Chinese foreign
minister Wang Yi and officials, Mr Hunt sought to demonstrate his family ties
to China.
But Mr Hunt
erred and told his hosts: "My wife is Japanese - my wife is Chinese. Sorry,
that's a terrible mistake to make."
Following
some laughter, he added: "My wife is Chinese and my children are
half-Chinese and so we have Chinese grandparents who live in Xian and strong
family connections in China."
As well as
risking upsetting his wife, Mr Hunt's blunder also threatened to offend the
Chinese officials sat across the table from him.
Chinese-Japanese
relations have been mired in tensions since Japan's invasion of China before
and during the Second World War.
Mr Hunt is
married to Lucia Guo and the couple have three children.
After
graduating from Oxford University, Mr Hunt spent two years in Japan teaching
English and learning Japanese.
Shortly after
becoming the longest-serving health secretary since the NHS was created, Mr
Hunt moved to the foreign office at the beginning of the month.
He replaced
Mr Johnson, who resigned from government in protest at Prime Minister Theresa
May's Brexit plan.
During his
two-year spell as foreign secretary, Mr Johnson demonstrated his own gaffe-prone
streak when he compared New Zealand's traditional Maori greeting to a headbutt.
He also
angered Sikhs during a visit to a temple when he claimed a trade deal with
India would boost sales of whisky, seemingly unaware the drinking of alcohol is
forbidden under many Sikh teachings.
Mrs May was
forced to slap down Mr Johnson when he accused Saudi Arabia of abusing Islam
and acting as a puppeteer in proxy wars throughout the Middle East.
More from
China
China's
internet czar Lu Wei charged with accepting bribes
Bomb
detonated outside US embassy in Beijing
China's most
expensive film is withdrawn after it flops
China issues
global warning as economy slows
Pilot
'smoking e-cigarette' forces Air China flight to plunge
China
releases widow of Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo for medical treatment
On a trip to
Myanmar, the senior Tory was caught on camera reciting a colonial poem before
being stopped by an ambassador.
And he caused
a storm at last year's Conservative Party conference by claiming a Libyan city
could become the "next Dubai" if they "clear the dead bodies
away".
0 comments
Post a Comment