How did British PM David Cameron's ex-girlfriend become a nun?

April 30, 2012

nun


London, April 30: A former girlfriend of British Prime Minister David Cameron, who met her as a Conservative Party worker in the 1990s, left politics and worked in advertising but took to drinking and addiction before finally becoming a nun in the US.

According to the Daily Mail, 44-year-old Laura Adshead was a student at the Cheltenham Ladies' College. She went to Oxford, where she met Cameron when they were young undergraduates.

She worked in London at the Conservative Party headquarters, and dated Cameron from 1990 till 1991. Cameron continued to work at the Conservative Central Office, and she went on to become the then prime minister John Major's correspondence secretary.

Adshead later left politics to study at the Wharton business school in Philadelphia and became an executive in New York for an advertising agency.

But the stress of success proved too much for her. She took to drinking and addiction before finally finding salvation in god at an abbey in Connecticut, the daily said.

Now known as Sister John Mary, she works at her convent with 36 other sisters.

"I did think my life would progress on the normal tracks of meeting someone, marrying, having children, but that's not the path that God has led me," Sister John Mary says in a new documentary.

Photographs are shown of her as a young woman, posing in a leopard-skin top, smoking and drinking a glass of wine.

But she said her lifestyle brought her only loneliness.

"I feel like I tried most things in life that are supposed to make you happy. That journey took me down into alcoholism and drug addiction," she said.

The daily said that in a 2007 biography of Cameron, a former colleague at the party headquarters said Laura was granted a "period of compassionate leave" to recover from the heartbreak.

The film shows the ceremony that Laura went through to join the nuns.

She took her vows four years ago, but the process lasts for five-and-a-half years following which she be eligible to assume the title of "Mother".


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News Network
April 27,2020

London, Apr 27: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson returns to work on Monday more than three weeks after being hospitalised for the coronavirus and spending three days in intensive care.

Johnson, one of the highest-profile people to have contracted the virus, returned to 10 Downing Street on Sunday evening and will chair a meeting on Monday morning of the coronavirus "war cabinet", his colleagues confirmed.

Dominic Raab, the foreign secretary who has deputised in Johnson's absence, told the BBC on Sunday that his return would be a "boost for the government and a boost for the country".

Raab also claimed the prime minister was "raring to go".

Johnson, 55, was admitted to hospital on April 5 suffering from "persistent symptoms" of the deadly disease.

His condition worsened and he later admitted after being put in intensive care that "things could have gone either way".

He was discharged on April 12 and has been recuperating at his official residence, west of London.

In a video message after leaving hospital, Johnson thanked "Jenny from New Zealand and Luis from Portugal" for helping him recover.

On medical advice, he has not been doing official government work during his convalescence but has spoken to Queen Elizabeth and US President Donald Trump on the phone.

The British leader was diagnosed with the virus late last month but initially stayed at Downing Street and was filmed taking part in a round of applause for health workers in the days before he went to hospital.

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News Network
June 13,2020

Mexico City, Jun 13: The number of people, who have died of COVID-19 in Mexico, has risen by 544 to 16,448 within the past 24 hours, Jose Luis Alomia, the director of epidemiology at the Health Ministry, said.

He also said on late Friday that the number of confirmed coronavirus cases had increased by 5,222 to 139,196 within the same period of time.

A day earlier, the Latin American nation has recorded 4,790 new confirmed cases of the coronavirus, with 587 fatalities.

The World Health Organization declared the COVID-19 outbreak a pandemic on March 11. To date, more than 7.6 million people have been infected with the coronavirus worldwide, with over 425,000 fatalities, according to Johns Hopkins University.

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News Network
June 30,2020

Six months since the new coronavirus outbreak, the pandemic is still far from over, the World Health Organization said Monday, warning that "the worst is yet to come".

Reaching the half-year milestone just as the death toll surpassed 500,000 and the number of confirmed infections topped 10 million, the WHO said it was a moment to recommit to the fight to save lives.

"Six months ago, none of us could have imagined how our world -- and our lives -- would be thrown into turmoil by this new virus," WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a virtual briefing.

"We all want this to be over. We all want to get on with our lives. But the hard reality is this is not even close to being over.

"Although many countries have made some progress, globally the pandemic is actually speeding up.

"We're all in this together, and we're all in this for the long haul.

"We will need even greater stores of resilience, patience, humility and generosity in the months ahead.

"We have already lost so much -- but we cannot lose hope."

Tedros also said that the pandemic had brought out the best and worst humanity, citing acts of kindness and solidarity, but also misinformation and the politicisation of the virus.

In an atmosphere of global political division and fractures on a national level, "the worst is yet to come. I'm sorry to say that," he said.

"With this kind of environment and condition, we fear the worst."

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