Home » London, the kisses forbidden with the lover engulf the Minister of Health

London, the kisses forbidden with the lover engulf the Minister of Health

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LONDON – The minister apologized, he is “very sorry”, but he does not resign because “the affair is private and the fight against the coronavirus is long”. Prime Minister Boris Johnson defends him, “he has my full confidence” and “the case is closed.” But no. The scandal that yesterday involved the British Minister of Health Matt Hancock still has many troubled aspects, including sex, betrayals, obscure contracts. And there is an all-Italian “connection”.

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First of all, Gina Coladangelo, prince advisor and multimillionaire to the minister and, since yesterday, Hancock’s secret lover, after the scoop of the Sun who published an extraordinary video, shot by a surveillance camera of the Ministry of Health, in which Hancock, 42 years old, hugs, kisses and fondles Coladangelo, 43, in a room away from prying eyes. We will have to understand how such a sensitive film could have come out of a government institution. But now there are other priorities.

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Because this is not just a story of passion, sex and betrayal, albeit sensational: both married, he two children with the osteopath Martha Hoyer Millar, she three with her husband Oliver Tress, founder of fashion and lifestyle stores Oliver Bonas. Hancock and Coladangelo, an expert in “marketing and communication”, met when they went to Oxford University together (“Oh, he’s always so determined,” she told her last year. Bbc) and where then Gina was also friends with Martha, Hancock’s future wife.

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But there is more. First, it’s a big story for Hancock, who broke his own anti-coronavirus rules. The video dates back to May 3, when the Johnson government still told the British that they could not even hug their loved ones otherwise they could have killed them with Covid. The tabloid commentator Daily Mail, Dan Wootton, yesterday destroyed Hancock: “He told us that we couldn’t even go to visit our dying mother, while he was making out with his lover!” Yesterday, on the radio Lbc, an English listener burst into tears, remembering his father’s lightning funeral, “faster than coffee,” due to restrictions. While the web overflows with fury and indignation towards Hancock and the Johnson government. According to a YouGov poll, 53 percent of Britons demand the minister’s immediate resignation.

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But there is another major problem for Hancock and Johnson: the conflict of interest. Gina Coladangelo, born in 1977 in Hitching, is the daughter of the English florist Heather and the 70-year-old Italian Rino Coladangelo, another multi-millionaire British health prince, former director of hospitals and now CEO of Rephine, a pharmaceutical consulting company. In addition to the government, Gina works for the Luther Pendragon lobbying firm: many of her clients have had contracts with the British public health managed by Hancock. But above all, Gina’s brother, the 42-year-old Roberto Coladangelo, is the executive director of a company, Partnering Health, which (just happened?) Obtained various contracts from the British public health during the pandemic.

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In short, this story still seems to be written. Meanwhile, Gina has disappeared, she seems to have left her 4.5 million euro family mansion in Wandsworth, an excellent residential area in London just below the historic energy plant of Animals by Pink Floyd, while a neighbor says, “Gina? A great person. But how did he get along with Hancock? ‘

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