Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian-Origin Man Ameet Gill, 32, Writes British PM David Cameron's Speech

IANS, 28 Jul, 2015 12:26 PM
    A writer of Indian-origin wrote the speech on tackling Islamic extremism and "the failures of integration" that British Prime Minister David Cameron delivered recently.
     
    Ameet Gill, 32, has now become one of Cameron's most trusted advisors since joining his team nine years ago, the Daily Mail reported on Tuesday.
     
    His induction gave him daily access to the prime minister, making him the most influential figure from an ethnic minority background in British politics.
     
    Gill admits struggling with his own ethnic identity in the past and recalls the hardships he faced while growing up with dual identities as a second-generation migrant Briton.
     
    "Sometimes you feel British, sometimes you feel Indian, sometimes you feel nothing, and if there was an ideology such as Islamic State around for others like me when I was a teenager, I have no doubt that some of my friends might have been attracted to it," Gill was quoted as saying.
     
    Cameron's speech last week spoke about how terrorists could offer "a sense of belonging" that some young people lack at home, leaving them susceptible to violence.
     
    Having seen the struggles of his own family, Gill was also behind Cameron's speech last month attacking the ridiculous merry-go-round of taxing low-earners, then giving them money back in benefits.
     
    Gill's parents arrived in Britain as impoverished teenage migrants from rural India. He grew up in Banbury, Oxfordshire. 
     
    Gill studied history on a scholarship at Oxford University and worked as a researcher for television. His parents wanted him to be a doctor or engineer but Gill started out as a Labour party supporter.
     
    Although now on the Liberal wing of Britain's Tory Party, he was among the first in Cameron's circle to flag up the issue of immigration.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Hindu Population Up In USA, Becomes Fourth-Largest Faith

    Hindu Population Up In USA, Becomes Fourth-Largest Faith
    Fueled by immigration, America's Hindu population has reached 2.23 million, an increase of about one million or 85.8 percent since 2007, making Hinduism the fourth-largest faith

    Hindu Population Up In USA, Becomes Fourth-Largest Faith

    Canada becomes Modi-fied

    Canada becomes Modi-fied
    Asserting a spirit of trust and transformation in India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi concluded his highly productive tri-nation visit to Canada with a landmark deal of over seven million pounds of uranium to an energy-hungry India.

    Canada becomes Modi-fied

    Indian-Origin councillor Harbhajan Kaur Dheer Becomes First Woman Asian Mayor in Britain

    Indian-Origin councillor Harbhajan Kaur Dheer Becomes First Woman Asian Mayor in Britain
    Councillor Harbhajan Kaur Dheer, 62, who succeeded councillor Tej Ram Bagha on Tuesday at the Annual Council Meeting, belongs to Britain's Labour party.

    Indian-Origin councillor Harbhajan Kaur Dheer Becomes First Woman Asian Mayor in Britain

    DART Digs Out After Second Nepal Quake, Opening Roads And Treating Victims

    Lt.-Col. Ed Izatt, the commander of Canada's Disaster Assistance Response Team, says that's allowing the flow of aid agencies and essential goods to affected areas.

    DART Digs Out After Second Nepal Quake, Opening Roads And Treating Victims

    Islamic State's No. 2 man killed in Iraq airstrike: Report

    Islamic State's No. 2 man killed in Iraq airstrike: Report
    The No.2 leader of the Islamic State (IS) terrorist group is believed to have been killed on Wednesday in a US-led coalition airstrike in northern Iraq, the Iraqi defense ministry said.

    Islamic State's No. 2 man killed in Iraq airstrike: Report

    'Indian Diaspora Should Move Beyond Culture'

    'Indian Diaspora Should Move Beyond Culture'
    The Indian diaspora must move beyond culture, heritage and traditions into present day areas of sustainable development, according to a well-known academic here.

    'Indian Diaspora Should Move Beyond Culture'