The Brtitish government said Sunday it had closed a loophole that could have seen Queen Elizabeth's head chopped off stamps if the Royal Mail was sold to a foreign firm.
The Brtitish government said Sunday it had closed a loophole that could have seen Queen Elizabeth's head chopped off stamps if the Royal Mail was sold to a foreign firm.
Ministers have squared the plans with Buckingham Palace and the sovereign's head will be kept on stamps in the future, Postal Services Minister Ed Davey said.
"After listening to views of members of both houses of parliament and the palace, we have agreed this additional safeguard," he said.
Business Secretary Vince Cable is to unveil the amendments today. The previous draft legislation paving the way for Royal Mail to be privatised did not explicitly spell out that the queen's head should remain on the iconic stamps.
The bill gave Queen Elizabeth a veto over any use of her image but did not insist that, as per tradition, her head was shown.
Royal Mail chief executive Moya Greene said, "It's unthinkable Royal Mail stamps would not have the image of the monarch so we strongly support any measure that protects that key feature."
The monarch's head, facing left, has appeared on British adhesive postage stamps since their invention with the 1840 'Penny Black', featuring queen Victoria (see pic).
Email effect
In a bid to secure its future as Britons increasingly use email instead of sending letters, the cash-strapped government wants to sell off Royal Mail to give it an injection of private sector capital.
The British stamps are the only ones in the world that do not carry the country's name just the portrait of the sovereign.
The current standard stamps, drawn up in 1967 by Alan Machin, are considered a design classic and a defining icon of Britain recognised around the world.
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