LONDON: British Prime Minister David Cameron called Nigeria and Afghanistan “possibly the two most corrupt countries in the world” in inadvertently public remarks, as Queen Elizabeth II was caught making her own gaffe about a “rude” Chinese delegation.

Mr Cameron was filmed making the remarks to the queen and Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby at an event on Tuesday at Buckingham Palace, ahead of an anti-corruption summit he is hosting in London on Thursday.

“We’ve got some leaders of some fantastically corrupt countries coming to Britain,” the prime minister said.

“Nigeria and Afghanistan, possibly the two most corrupt countries in the world,” he added.

Mr Welby, who worked as an oil executive in West Africa before joining the church and who also undertook conflict resolution work in Nigeria, noted that “this particular president is actually not corrupt”.

“He’s really trying,” Mr Cameron agreed, and the queen noted to Mr Welby: “He is trying, isn’t he?”

It was not clear to whom they were referring, but Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari and Afghanistan’s President Ashraf Ghani are both due to attend the summit.

‘Undiplomatic Chinese’

At a separate garden party event on Tuesday, the queen was caught on camera describing the delegation for a Chinese state visit last year as “rude”.

Police commander Lucy D’Orsi was introduced to the queen as the woman who oversaw secu-rity for the visit of President Xi Jinping and his wife in October, to which the monarch replied: “Oh, bad luck.”

Ms D’Orsi was recorded as saying, “I’m not sure whether you knew, but it was quite a testing time for me,” to which the queen replied that she did know, before adding that members of the Chinese delegation “were very rude to the ambassador”.

The police commander agreed, saying, “It was very rude and very undiplomatic I thought”. It was not clear which members of the delegation they were referring to.

Beijing and Chinese state media at the time hailed the visit as a high watermark in Sino-British relations.

There was no immediate response from Chinese officials to Tuesday’s remarks, while the Daily Mail cited Buckingham Palace as saying it would not comment on the queen’s private conversations.

“However the Chinese State Visit was extremely successful and all parties worked closely to ensure it proceeded smoothly,” the British newspaper quoted a spokesman as saying.

Embarrassing comments

A spokesman for the Nigerian president said Mr Cameron’s comments on corruption were “embarrassing”.

“This is embarrassing to us, to say the least, given the good work that the president is doing. The eyes of the world are on what is happening here,” spokesman Garba Shehu said in remarks released on social media.

“The prime minister must be looking at an old snapshot of Nigeria. Things are changing with corruption and everything else.”

In Afghanistan, Mr Ghani also made a promise to rein in runaway corruption when he was elected in 2014.

A Downing Street spokeswoman said it would not comment on a private conversation, but noted that both Mr Buhari and Mr Ghani “have acknowledged the scale of the corruption challenge they face in their countries”.

She said that in a collection of essays to be published at the summit, Mr Ghani writes that Afghanistan is “one of the most corrupt countries on Earth”.

Mr Buhari, for his part, writes that corruption became a “way of life” under “supposedly accountable democratic governments”, the spokeswoman said.

She concluded: “Both leaders have been invited to the summit because they are driving the fight against corruption in their countries”.

Published in Dawn, May 12th, 2016

Opinion

Editorial

When medicine fails
Updated 18 Nov, 2024

When medicine fails

Between now and 2050, medical experts expect antibiotic resistance to kill 40m people worldwide.
Nawaz on India
Updated 18 Nov, 2024

Nawaz on India

Nawaz Sharif’s hopes of better ties with India can only be realised when New Delhi responds to Pakistan positively.
State of abuse
18 Nov, 2024

State of abuse

DESPITE censure from the rulers and society, and measures such as helplines and edicts to protect the young from all...
Football elections
17 Nov, 2024

Football elections

PAKISTAN football enters the most crucial juncture of its ‘normalisation’ era next week, when an Extraordinary...
IMF’s concern
17 Nov, 2024

IMF’s concern

ON Friday, the IMF team wrapped up its weeklong unscheduled talks on the Fund’s ongoing $7bn programme with the...
‘Un-Islamic’ VPNs
Updated 17 Nov, 2024

‘Un-Islamic’ VPNs

If curbing pornography is really the country’s foremost concern while it stumbles from one crisis to the next, there must be better ways to do so.