
Leader of the United Kingdom's Conservative Party, Kemi Badenoch, has revealed how she once snitched on a fellow pupil for cheating in an exam and it led to him being expelled from their school.
Speaking in a recent interview with BBC News, the Tory leader recalled, when she was 'about 14 or 15', she stood up during the middle of an exam and said: 'He's cheating, he's the one that's doing it.
'That boy ended up getting
expelled,' Mrs Badenoch admitted, adding: 'I didn't get praised for it.
'I was a relatively popular kid at
school, and people said 'why did you do that, why would you do it?'. I said
'because he was doing the wrong thing'.'
After the incident, the
Conservative MP said she was told, 'You don't belong here, you don't know how
to behave'.
'I've heard that all my life,' she
continued. ''You don't follow the rules, you don't do what you're supposed to'.
''You're always sticking your head
above the parapet, you're too direct, you tell the truth when you don't need to
tell the truth when you should pipe down'.'
Mrs Badenoch was born in Britain
but spent her childhood in Nigeria and the US before she returned to the UK at
the age of 16.
Elsewhere in the BBC interview, Mrs
Badenoch revealed how the case of Austrian sex offender Josef Fritzl caused her
to lose her faith in God.
She said she was 'never that
religious' while growing up but 'believed there was a God' and 'would have
defined myself as a Christian apologist'.
But this changed in 2008 when she read reports that Fritzl had imprisoned and repeatedly raped his daughter, Elisabeth, in his basement over 24 years.
Mrs Badenoch, whose maternal
grandfather was a Methodist minister, said: 'I couldn't stop reading this
story. And I read her account, how she prayed every day to be rescued.
'And I thought, I was praying for
all sorts of stupid things, and I was getting my prayers answered.
'I was praying to have good grades, my hair should grow longer, and I would pray for the bus to come on time so I wouldn't miss something.
'It's like, why were those prayers answered and not this woman's prayers? And it just, it was like someone blew out a candle.'
But Mrs Badenoch insisted that while she had 'rejected God', she had not rejected Christianity and remained a 'cultural Christian'.
She said she wanted to 'protect
certain things because I think the world that we have in the UK is very much
built on many Christian values'.
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