Subscribe To Print Edition About The Tribune Code Of Ethics Download App Advertise with us Classifieds
search-icon-img
search-icon-img
Advertisement

UK PM Johnson's divorce with Indian-origin wife finalised

London, May 7 Boris Johnson has become the first British Prime Minister in 250 years to divorce while in the office as papers filed by his Indian-origin ex-wife, Marina Wheeler, earlier this year, were granted recently. The 55-year-old had announced...
  • fb
  • twitter
  • whatsapp
  • whatsapp
Advertisement

London, May 7

Boris Johnson has become the first British Prime Minister in 250 years to divorce while in the office as papers filed by his Indian-origin ex-wife, Marina Wheeler, earlier this year, were granted recently.

The 55-year-old had announced his engagement with fiancee Carrie Symonds soon after the decree absolute was filed in February.

Advertisement

Symonds (32), who moved to Downing Street with Johnson in July last year, gave birth to their baby boy, Wilfred Lawrie Nicholas Johnson, last Wednesday.

According to the Daily Mirror, Johnson’s divorce from Wheeler, his second wife, was finalised with the grant of the decree just before the birth of the baby on April 29.

Advertisement

Wheeler, whose mother Dip Singh hailed from Punjab, is a barrister and columnist, who has four grown up children with Johnson.

On February 18, she obtained permission from the Central Family Court in London to apply for a decree absolute, the legal document ending a marriage.

The newspaper believes the paperwork was filed “immediately” and it is believed that Johnson and Wheeler could each end up with 4 million pounds from the divorce settlement.

Wheeler, who has previously written about surviving cancer, is due to publish ‘The Lost Homestead’ about her mother, who married her father, BBC foreign correspondent Charles Wheeler, in 1962.

Johnson’s first marriage was to socialite Allegra Mostyn-Owen, between 1987 and 1993.

With his latest divorce, he has become the first British Prime Minister to divorce while in the office since Augustus FitzRoy, the Duke of Grafton, back in 1769.

The Duke had shocked the Georgian society at the time when he had a very public affair with the courtesan Nancy Parsons. Matters were further complicated as his wife became pregnant by her lover, the Earl of Upper Ossory, with an Act of Parliament was approved granting their divorce in March 1769. PTI

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
tlbr_img1 Home tlbr_img2 Opinion tlbr_img3 Classifieds tlbr_img4 Videos tlbr_img5 E-Paper