
"The Guardian investigations team received a message from a non-profit organisation called Distributed Denial of Secrets saying it had a cache of files from the office of Boris Johnson. The trove of information shows what he has been up to since he left Downing Street as well as a few things he kept a secret when he was still there."
"The investigations reporter Henry Dyer tells Helen Pidd about how they trawled through emails, letters, spreadsheets, speeches and business contracts, as well as a minute-by-minute official log of how Johnson spent his time as prime minister, and why these files raise serious questions for him. From messages to Saudi princes to a meeting with a Venezuelan dictator, Henry explains what the team has learned."
A non-profit provided a cache of files from Boris Johnson's office. The files include emails, letters, spreadsheets, speeches, business contracts, and a minute-by-minute official log of his time as prime minister. The records document activities after he left Downing Street and reveal several previously undisclosed actions while he was in office. The material contains communications with Saudi princes and evidence of a meeting with a Venezuelan dictator. The breadth and detail of the trove allow reconstruction of schedules and contacts and raise serious questions about transparency, potential conflicts of interest, and the nature of his domestic and international engagements.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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