From BBC:
"Ex-Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher dies, aged 87"
Former Prime Minister Baroness
Thatcher has died "peacefully" at the age of 87 after suffering a stroke while
staying at the Ritz hotel in central London. David Cameron called her a "great Briton" and the Queen spoke of her sadness
at the death. Lady Thatcher was Conservative prime minister from 1979 to 1990. She was the
first woman to hold the role. She will not have a state funeral but will be accorded the same status as
Princess Diana and the Queen Mother. The ceremony, with full military honours, will take place at London's St
Paul's Cathedral. The union jack above Number 10 Downing Street has been lowered to half-mast
while Parliament will be recalled from its Easter recess on Wednesday to enable
MPs to pay tributes to the former prime minister. After cancelling planned talks in Paris with French President Francois
Hollande and returning to the UK, Mr Cameron made a statement outside No 10 in
which he described Lady Thatcher as "the patriot prime minister" and said she
had "taken a country that was on its knees and made it stand tall again". "Margaret Thatcher loved this country and served it with all she had. For
that she has her well-earned place in history - and the enduring respect and
gratitude of the British people," he said. Lady Thatcher, who retired from public speaking in 2002,
had suffered poor health for several years. She had been staying at the Ritz
hotel since being discharged from hospital at the end of last year. BBC political editor Nick Robinson said Lady Thatcher - whose husband Denis
died in 2003 - had been a controversial politician who inspired "passion" among
her critics and supporters. Her government privatised several state-owned industries and was involved in
a year-long stand-off with unions during the Miners' Strike of 1984-5. She was
also in power when the UK fought a war following Argentina's invasion of the
Falkland Islands in 1982. Lady Thatcher survived an assassination attempt in 1984, when the IRA bombed
the Brighton Grand Hotel, where she was staying for the Conservative Party's
annual conference. During her later years in office she became increasingly associated with
Euroscepticism. She is also seen as one of the key movers behind the fall of
communism in eastern Europe. World leaders and senior UK figures have been paying
tribute to Lady Thatcher. US President Barack Obama said the world had "lost one of the great champions
of freedom and liberty" and that "America has lost a true friend". German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she would "never forget her part in
surmounting the division of Europe and at the end of the Cold War". Ahead of his return to the UK, Mr Cameron told the BBC: "Margaret Thatcher
succeeded against all the odds. The real thing is she didn't just lead our
country; she saved our country. "I believe she will go down as the greatest British peacetime prime
minister." A Buckingham Palace spokesman said: "The Queen was sad to hear the news of
the death of Baroness Thatcher. Her Majesty will be sending a private message of
sympathy to the family." Lady Thatcher was born Margaret Roberts, the daughter of a shopkeeper and
Conservative councillor in Grantham, Lincolnshire, in 1925. She studied chemistry at Oxford University and worked for a plastics company
before marrying businessman Denis Thatcher in 1951. She gave birth to twins Mark and Carol in 1953, the year she also qualified
as a barrister, and served as MP for Finchley, north London, from 1959 to
1992. Having been education secretary, she successfully challenged former prime
minister Edward Heath for her party's leadership in 1975 and won general
elections in 1979, 1983 and 1987.
^ Another great person was lost today. While I do not know much of her domestic policies while in office she showed her determination and strong will-power by not only fighting the Argentinians when they invaded the Falkland Islands, but she also worked to help end communism in Eastern Europe. She is the British (and female) equivalent of Ronald Reagan and that is a high compliment. ^
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-22067155
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