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Boris Johnson’s widely criticised trip to Afghanistan when a crucial vote was due on Heathrow’s third runway cost the British taxpayer at least £20,000, The Ferret can reveal.

There were calls for Johnson’s resignation as foreign secretary in June after it emerged he was in Afghanistan on the day MPs voted on a divisive Heathrow expansion plan he had strongly opposed.

The timing of his trip to Afghanistan was widely condemned and Johnson only spent nine hours in Kabul.

Critics have now alleged he “misused” public money in order to avoid the vote on 25 June and to prevent personal political embarrassment.

Johnson had objected to a third runway at Heathrow for years. He even told fellow critics he would “lie down with you in front of bulldozers” to prevent it being built, as the airport is close to his Uxbridge and South Ruislip constituency.

Under collective responsibility cabinet ministers must vote with the government on key issues, meaning Johnson would have had to resign as foreign secretary to oppose the project. He subsequently resigned on 9 July, but over Brexit.

The Ferret submitted a freedom of information request to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) asking for details of Johnson’s trip.

We asked for the full cost of the trip and dates of when discussions on it began. The FCO refused to answer most questions but did disclose that the cost to the taxpayer for three staff to accompany Johnson was £19,366.

This included three flights at £6,322 each, a total of £18,966. The FCO refused to give the costs of Johnson’s flights or any other expenses, citing exemptions under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).

Details released could be used by others in the future to pose a significant risk to any individual’s personal safety during similar visits. Foreign and Commonwealth Office

According to the FCO, the information on Johnson’s travel was exempt from disclosure under section 22 of the FOIA because it was going to be published “in due course” on the FCO website.

This was “a qualified exemption which is subject to the public interest test. We have considered the public interest in releasing the information against the interest of withholding it,” the FCO said.

“There is a public interest in demonstrating transparency by releasing the information with this reply. However, we can also achieve transparency by the government publishing this information on the FCO website.”

The FCO also refused to reveal costs of any security personnel who accompanied Johnson on his trip, saying that it did not hold that information.

We also requested dates of when the trip was first discussed. But the FCO again refused to say, arguing that it was not in the public interest to disclose the information under Section 38 of FOIA covering health and safety.

The FCO reply acknowledged that there was “some public interest” in disclosing the information to demonstrate openness and public accountability.

“However, we balanced these against the grounds for non-disclosure, which, in this instance, includes the risk of undermining personal safety and security measures for visits of this nature,” the FCO said.

“Details released could be used by others in the future to pose a significant risk to any individual’s personal safety during similar visits. On balance, we concluded that the public interest in maintaining this exemption outweighs the public interest in disclosing the information.”

Critics have, however, condemned Johnson over the cost to the taxpayer and the FCO over the lack of transparency over the trip.

Everyone and their dog knows that Mr Johnson is a snake oil salesman. John Finnie, Green MSP

“Everyone and their dog knows that Mr Johnson is a snake oil salesman,” said Scottish Greens transport spokesperson, John Finnie MSP.

He added: “But it’s disappointing that a UK government department is withholding perfectly reasonable public information that relates to a crucial parliamentary vote. It simply adds to the suspicion that despite his promises to lie in front of bulldozers if Heathrow was expanded, Mr Johnson was happy for this hugely damaging project to go ahead.”

Scottish Labour’s head of campaigns, Neil Findlay MSP, said: “During his time as foreign secretary, Boris Johnson was an occasional disgrace and a permanent embarrassment. It looks like this was another occasion when Mr Johnson disgraced both his former office and the Tory government.”

He added: “This was simply a misuse of £20,000 of taxpayers’ money in a bid to save his embarrassment from going back on a promise he made to the people of London as mayor. It would be futile of me to ask the former foreign secretary to do the decent thing and apologise as we have learned from his disgusting remarks about Muslim women he does not have the decency to do such a thing.”

In the lead-up to the Heathrow vote, there was speculation on what position Johnson would take but it later emerged he was given permission to leave the UK for the vote, on which Tory MPs faced a strict three-line whip to back the plans.

Questions were asked of Johnson’s whereabouts but the government refused to say where the foreign secretary was. It only emerged he was in Afghanistan after the Afghan government tweeted images of Johnson and its deputy foreign minister, Hekmat Karzai, in Kabul.

Acting and Deputy Foreign Minister Meets British Foreign Secretary https://t.co/8Nk9NIUEfm pic.twitter.com/s9lTqh4iBF — MFA Afghanistan 🇦🇫 (@mfa_afghanistan) June 25, 2018

International trade minister Greg Hands stood down the week before so he could vote against the runway, despite also reportedly offered the chance to go overseas on official business and miss the vote.

People who called for Johnson’s resignation over the issue included prominent Tory backbencher, Sarah Wollaston, who said he should have resigned “on a point of principle”.

She told BBC Radio 4’s Westminster Hour: “Just being conveniently out of the country I’m afraid won’t wash.”

Former Tory cabinet minister, Justine Greening, also condemned Johnson for missing the vote, as did Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn MP, who said: “I would have thought, if nothing else, as a constituency MP he would want to be in the Commons because, after all, his constituency is very, very near to Heathrow, and he has in the past made very strong statements against Heathrow, and, indeed, once he promised to lie down in front of a bulldozer on it.”

Johnson has not responded to a request to comment. The House of Commons backed a third runway at Heathrow.

Freedom of information response from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office

Photo thanks to Chatham House via CC by 2.0.