Difference between revisions of "Kim Howells"
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+ | |birth_place=Merthyr Tydfil, Wales | ||
+ | |nationality=British | ||
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|title=Minister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs | |title=Minister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs | ||
|start=11 May 2005 | |start=11 May 2005 | ||
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|title=Minister of State for Education | |title=Minister of State for Education | ||
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|title=Minister of State for Transport | |title=Minister of State for Transport | ||
|start=13 June 2003 | |start=13 June 2003 | ||
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|title=Parliamentary Undersecretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport | |title=Parliamentary Undersecretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport | ||
|start=11 June 2001 | |start=11 June 2001 | ||
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+ | |title=Minister of State for Higher Education | ||
+ | |start=10 September 2004 | ||
+ | |end=11 May 2005 | ||
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+ | |title=Member of Parliament for Pontypridd | ||
+ | |start=23 February 1989 | ||
+ | |end=12 April 2010 | ||
+ | }}{{job | ||
+ | |title=Chairman of the Intelligence and Security Committee | ||
+ | |start=6 July 2005 | ||
+ | |end=24 February 2010 | ||
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}} | }} | ||
'''Kim Howells''' was the former Middle East junior Foreign Minister in [[Tony Blair]]'s cabinet and a former chair of the [[Labour Friends of Israel]]. Howells is also a former Culture Secretary (2003). | '''Kim Howells''' was the former Middle East junior Foreign Minister in [[Tony Blair]]'s cabinet and a former chair of the [[Labour Friends of Israel]]. Howells is also a former Culture Secretary (2003). |
Revision as of 13:57, 20 September 2015
Kim Howells (diplomat, politician) | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Born | 27 November 1946 Merthyr Tydfil, Wales | ||||||||||||||||||||
Nationality | British | ||||||||||||||||||||
Alma mater | Middlesex University, University of Warwick, Anglia Ruskin University | ||||||||||||||||||||
Spouse | Eirlys Davies | ||||||||||||||||||||
Party | Labour | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Kim Howells was the former Middle East junior Foreign Minister in Tony Blair's cabinet and a former chair of the Labour Friends of Israel. Howells is also a former Culture Secretary (2003).
On the Middle East Howells is one of the most quoted politicians in the UK government.
Defending Israel
According to the Guardian, he "shocked UK diplomats" when he told the Jerusalem Post that 'rocket and artillery attacks on the Gaza Strip were a "measured" and "proportionate" response to Palestinian mortar attacks on Israel'. This at a time when 'British diplomats were lodging complaints over dozens of attacks on Gaza that destroyed schools and homes and the use of sonic booms to intimidate Palestinian civilians'.
Career
- July 2007: Minister of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office of the United Kingdom[1]
- 2003 - June 2007: Junior Foreign Office Minister, looking after Africa, Asia and the UN. (replaced by Mark Malloch Brown).
- 2005 - Present: Minister of State at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office
- Present: Minister for the Middle East
Affiliations
- Labour Friends of Israel – former chairman
References
- Stuart Jeffries, 'I am not a fuddy duddy', The Guardian, 17 January 2003.
- Chris McGreal, Foreign Office 'unrelentingly pro-Palestinian' says Israel, The Guardian, 26 November 2005.
- ↑ Darfur, Somalia high on Security Council agenda as members hold historic summit on peace, security in Africa, ReliefWeb, 25 Sep 2007 (Accessed: 27 September 2007)