By contrast, he says that he would call the police to report a neighbour who wasn’t self-isolating.
He repeatedly insists that “this isn’t the choice”, and says the Government shouldn’t be proposing to break international law.
He says that Britain has raised these issues at the UN with 27 partners to “call out the Government of China”.
“For us whether it will be the Conservative Party or Labour Party at the head of this country we will try to establish better relations.”
Marr puts to him the country’s own local government figures which show the Uighur population falling by 83 per cent.
“When the Salisbury attack happened…we should not have equivocated or prevaricated. We should not have called for consensus.”
“I never had his approval ratings…I think he’s made a great start…I think he’s made a great start.”
“You can’t have one law for Downing Street and another law for everybody else,” he says.
“I hope that people will also bear with us…What I would say is that more people are calling 111 than before. That’s to be expected.”
The candidate for Labour’s leadership says that he wants to defend “the three pillars of Corbynism”.
The Foreign Secretary on the prospect of the EU demanding a role for the court in a future trade deal.
“We were held responsible for every failure…this was the main problem. But the EU is like a miracle – almost impossible.”
“The direction of travel of the European Union on economic has been challenging neo-liberalism.”
And he says that UK ambassadors reportedly being told not to sit alongside their EU counterparts “comes across as a bit petty”.
We could give in to the leftist, isolationist Little England vision of a reclusive UK. Alternatively, we could make Global Britain a reality.