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Mhfd Hundreds of mentally ill prisoners denied urgent treatment in England
They were attacked as warmongers, threatened with deselection and despised by Neville Chamberlain, who branded them  the Glamour Boys . Yet a new book has claimed that a group of gay MPs were among the first to warn Britain about the danger Hitler posed. Four of them later died in action.The extraordinary untold story of gay and bisexual British politicians and their bravery in the second world war has been unearthed by Chris Bryant, Labour MP for Rhondda.Without these parliamentary rebels sounding the alarm as early as 1932 and speaking and voting against Chamberlains policy of appeasement, Bryant argues, Britain  would never have gone to war with Hitler, Churchill would never have become prime minister and Nazism would never have been defeated .Using previously unseen documents, including diaries, private letters, photo albums and material found in the National Archives, Tate galleries and Eton College library, Bryant spent five yea <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.us>stanley cup usa</a> rs piecing together the stories of men whose sexuality and heroism has been excised from history until now.View image in fullscreenThe Night of the Long Knives  <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.com.de>stanley thermobecher</a> in Berlin, 1934. Photograph: Photo 12/AlamyFrom Jack Macnamara, the young Conservative MP for Chelmsford, and Ronnie Cartland, the younger brother of the novelist Ba <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.es>stanley cup</a> rbara, to Victor Cazalet, a first world war hero, and Robert Bernays, a Liberal member of the national government, Bryant charts their alarm at Hitlers territorial ambitions, prompted by their frequent trips to Berlin, then con Uird Paul Mahoney is UK frontrunner for human rights court
Britains relations with Saudi Arabia are based on extensive business and investment links, including defence sales and a secretive  <a href=https://www.cups-stanley.fr>stanley france</a> security connection that is routinely cited as vital by the UK government 鈥?especially when public opinion hones in on the Gulf countrys strict legal system.The case of Karl Andree, 74, who may face a public flogging for possessing homemade wine, is one of those calculated to set the stiffest of Foreign Office upper lips quivering. Combined, coincidentally, with news of a cabinet row over a now cancelled contract to provide advice to the Saudi prison system, it throws a harsh and officially unwelcome spotlight on the often troubled ties between London and Riyadh.In bilateral terms, it is a relationship that is valued by both sides. Saudi Arabia is Britains primary trading partner in the Middle East; 200 joint ventures are worth $17.5bn  拢11.5bn ; some 30,000 UK nationals live and work in the kingdom. It is also Britains largest arms market by far, receiving alm <a href=https://www.stanleys-cups.uk>water bottle stanley</a> ost 拢4bn from sales between May 2010 and March 2015.Internationally, Saudi Arabia has the worlds second largest proven oil reserves and occupies a strategic position that has made it a vital partner for the US and other western countries for decades <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.fr>stanley france</a> . In its current assertive mood, it is locked in confrontation with its regional rival Iran, leading a controversial military campaign in neighbouring Yemen as well as backing rebels fighting the Syrian president, Bashar al-Assad.It is also, despi
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