برطانوی وزیراعظم تھریسا مے نے پاکستانی نژاد ساجد جاوید کو ملک کا وزیرداخلہ مقرر کر دیا ہے۔ان کا تقرر امبر رُڈ کی جگہ عمل میں لایا گیا ہے جو گزشتہ روز اپنے عہدے سے مستعفی ہو گئی تھیں۔برطانوی میڈیا کے مطابق وزیر داخلہ ایمبررڈ نے پارلیمنٹ کے سامنے غیرقانونی تارکین وطن کی واپسی سے متعلق غلط بیانی پر عہدے سے استعفیٰ دے دیا تھا جس کے بعد ساجد جاوید کو اس عہدے کی ذمہ داری سونپ دی گئی ہے۔ساجد جاوید 2010 میں برومزگرو سے رکن پارلیمنٹ منتخب ہوئے تھے اور وہ اس سے قبل بطور کمیونیٹیز منسٹر خدمات انجام دے رہے تھے
برطانیہ میں ساجد جاوید کے والد کو پہلی نوکری ایک کاٹن فیکٹری میں ملی ۔ اُس کے بعد وہ ایک بس ڈرائیور کے طور پر گزراوقات کرتے رہے۔جب ساجد جاوید چار سال کے ہوئے تو ان کے والد نےلیڈیز گارمنٹسکا کاروبارشروع کر دیا۔سات افراد پر مشتمل ساجد جاوید کاخاندان چھوٹی سی دکان کے اوپر دو کمروں کے فلیٹ میں رہتا رہا۔
ساجد جاوید کی شادی لورا سے ہوئی ہے اور ان کے چار بچے ہیں۔انہوں نےاپنے محنت کش والد سے جو بات سیکھی ہے وہ یہی ہے کہ اگرزندگی میں کچھ حاصل کرنا ہے تو اس کے لیےمحنت سے جی نہیں چرانا چاہیے۔
London; Sajid Javid has been appointed the new Home Secretary after Amber Rudd sensationally quit over the Windrush scandal. Mr Javid will move to the Home Office from his role as Communities Secretary and was the bookies favourite to replace Ms Rudd after her resignation late on Sunday night. Sajid Javed along with Sadiq Khan hold top potions in UK now.
Mr Javid, 44, the son of a Pakistani bus driver,Abdul Ghani Javid came to UK
He draws much of his drive from his family’s humble roots. In a pamphlet published this week, Mr Javid spoke with pride of how his father Abdul Ghani had arrived at Heathrow airport in 1961 “with a £1 note in his pocket”.
He explained that his grandfather had “touchingly but mistakenly” thought that the £1 note would see him through his first month in the UK. Abdul Ghani Javid found work in a cotton mill in Rochdale, and then as a bus conductor and a driver, when he was nicknamed “Mr Night and day” by colleagues.
After that he started to sell clothes made by his mother Zabeida on a market stall before opening a shop in Bristol. Sajid, one of five boys, was brought up in Bristol and turned down apprenticeships and instead studied Economics and Politics at Exeter University, the first member of his family to go to university.
He said: “This is the root of my conservative beliefs. My mother and father had nothing and, like many people in their adopted country, worked their way up.
“All they had to rely on was their drive and determination, a willingness to work hard, and the confidence to take risks in the hope of greater rewards.
“There were, of course, ups and downs. But whenever my parents were knocked down, in business or anything else, they picked themselves up and started again. The abiding lesson was clear to me: don’t doubt yourself and don’t stop trying.”