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The deadline for the government to hand over Boris Johnson’s WhatsApp messages to the COVID Inquiry has been extended.

Inquiry chair Lady Hallett had ordered the government to hand over the messages – alongside diary entries and notes – by 4pm on Tuesday 30 May.

The deadline has now set been 4pm on Thursday 1 June. The Cabinet Office asked for an extension to Monday 5 June as they do not have access to Mr Johnson‘s messages or notebooks, but this was rejected.

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What is the COVID inquiry asking for?

  • Unredacted messages sent and received by Boris Johnson between 1 January 2020 and 24 February 2022.
  • Unredacted diaries for Mr Johnson between 1 January 2020 and 24 February 2022
  • Copies of 24 unredacted notebooks filled in by Mr Johnson between 1 January 2020 and 24 February 2022
  • Unredacted messages sent and received by adviser Henry Cook between 1 January 2020 and 24 February 2022.
  • The inquiry wants messages – even from group chats – about the government response to COVID, as well as contact with a list of certain experts, ministers, civil servants and advisers

This is despite saying in their original appeal against the order that there was “unambiguously irrelevant” material in the redacted parts of messages sent to the inquiry.

When the Cabinet Office lodged the appeal on 15 May, it said Mr Johnson’s WhatsApp messages had not yet been received by the government.

A spokesman for the former prime minister said today that he had “no objection” to sending the material to the inquiry.

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Mr Johnson has written to the Cabinet Office to demand the government requests in writing access to his messages and notes – which he says has not happened yet.

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Rishi Sunak insists that ‘tens of thousands’ of documents have been handed over to the inquiry and that ‘lessons will be learned’ from its findings.

Sources close to Mr Johnson say Cabinet Office officials have visited his office in person to examine notebooks within the past few weeks.

If the government does not abide by the new deadline on Thursday, Lady Hallett has ordered that a statement be sent by a “senior civil servant” confirming the Cabinet Office does not have the requested information, as well as a chronology of the government’s contacts with Mr Johnson about the requests and whether the government has ever had the data.

Breaking a section 21 order could see the government face criminal proceedings, and there is also potential for a court battle over whether the information should be passed to the inquiry.

Speaking shortly before the inquiry’s announcement Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said the “government is carefully considering its position, but it is confident in the approach that it’s taking”.

The battle between the parties centres on messages Mr Johnson sent and received, as well as his diaries and his notebooks from during the pandemic.

Baroness Hallett opens preliminary hearing for COVID-19 Inquiry
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Baroness Hallett opens preliminary hearing for COVID-19 Inquiry

Lady Hallett made an order under section 21 of the Inquiries Act 2005 for the material to be handed over by the Cabinet Office.

Messages to and from former adviser Henry Cook were also included in the legal action.

It is this order which has now been extended.

Lady Hallett highlighted in her explanation that the Cabinet Office redacted material about the policing of Sarah Everard protests during the period of restrictions – something she said was “not a promising start”.

She later obtained the messages in full.

She also identified communications – which have still only been seen in their redacted form – that she considers are “in fact relevant to my investigation”.

Labour’s deputy leader, Angela Rayner, said: “It now appears that vital evidence has gone missing. It must be found and handed over as requested if the whiff of a cover-up is to be avoided and bereaved families are to get the answers they deserve.

“It is for the COVID inquiry itself rather than Conservative ministers to decide what is and is not relevant material for its investigation, and this interference only serves to undermine the inquiry’s crucial job of getting to the truth.”

Daisy Cooper, the Liberal Democrats’ deputy leader, added: “This dog ate my homework type excuse from the government simply doesn’t stand up to scrutiny.

“For the Cabinet Office to simultaneously refuse to disclose Boris Johnson’s messages because they were irrelevant to the inquiry, whilst claiming not to even have them, will raise suspicions of another Conservative cover up.

“Rishi Sunak is too weak to stand up to Johnson and make him hand over this evidence, while bereaved families are being left aghast.

“The public has waited long enough already to get the truth. The inquiry’s work mustn’t be delayed any longer because of endless chaos in the Conservative Party.”

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Teenager to face trial over murder of nine-year-old Aria Thorpe

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Teenager to face trial over murder of nine-year-old Aria Thorpe

A teenager charged with the murder of nine-year-old Aria Thorpe will stand trial in June next year.

The 15-year-old boy, who cannot be named because of his age, appeared at Bristol Crown Court on Friday.

The defendant, who appeared via video link from youth detention accommodation, spoke only to confirm his name.

During a brief hearing, Judge Peter Blair KC, the Recorder of Bristol, set a provisional trial date for 15 June 2026.

The trial is expected to last two weeks.

Avon and Somerset Police were called to Lime Close in Weston-super-Mare just before 6.10pm on Monday, where nine-year-old Aria had suffered a single stab wound.

Flowers laid in memory of the young girl
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Flowers laid in memory of the young girl

The boy was arrested in nearby Worle a short time later.

His father was among those attending in the public gallery.

The teenager is next expected to appear in court on 16 March.

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UK hopes new German law will cut migrant small boats

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UK hopes new German law will cut migrant small boats

The British government is hoping a change in German law will help stop small boat crossings to the UK.

The measures to criminalise the facilitation of migrant smuggling towards the UK, agreed more than a year ago, have now been passed by German legislators.

British ministers say they mean gangs will no longer be able to store small boats or engines in Germany before transporting them into France to cross the Channel.

It will also strengthen existing UK-German law enforcement cooperation and information sharing, they say.

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said: “Together with our German allies, we are cracking down on the criminal gangs operating the illegal migration trade.

“I thank minister [of the interior] Alexander Dobrindt for Germany’s strong cooperation with the UK in tackling this issue.

“This government is restoring order at our borders by scaling up removals and removing the incentives that draw people here illegally.”

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The law passed on Friday is set to be in force by the end of the year, the government said.

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The first 10 months of 2025 saw record numbers of people crossing in small boats, although the total number of people arriving across the Channel has since fallen below the peak seen in 2022.

For 28 days no crossings were recorded in official figures before hundreds of people made the journey last weekend.


Last week: Small boat crossings resume after 28 days

Illegal small boat migration has become one of the most contentious issues in British politics, symbolising frustration with migration levels and a perceived lack of control from multiple prime ministers.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer moved away from the Rwanda deportation scheme and pledged instead to “smash the gangs” before his election victory.

However, the failure to make a substantial difference to the number of people crossing has been seized upon by both the Conservatives and Reform.

Others, like the Green Party’s Zack Polanski, have called for safe asylum routes to be opened to discourage people crossing clandestinely.

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Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper said: “Criminal smuggler gangs operate across borders, so governments and law enforcement need to cooperate across borders to bring them down.

“This major change in German law is the result of our close partnership working to tackle illegal migration and organised immigration crime. We will continue to ramp up our international cooperation to strengthen our own border security. These are the partnerships we build abroad to make us stronger at home.”

Adrian Matthews, director of intelligence at the National Crime Agency, said: “We welcome the legislative change in Germany.

“It will help boost our efforts against the small boats threat and it builds on our close working relationships with German partners who are key to helping disrupt organised crime groups operating from the continent.”

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Woman jailed for plotting with lover to murder husband in caravan and make it look like suicide

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Woman jailed for plotting with lover to murder husband in caravan and make it look like suicide

A woman and her lover who plotted to kill her husband so they could continue their affair have both been jailed for 19 years.

Michelle Mills and Geraint Berry planned to murder Christopher Mills and make it look like suicide.

They were found guilty of conspiracy to murder after a trial at Swansea Crown Court in October.

Michelle Mills and Geraint Berry
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Michelle Mills and Geraint Berry

Christopher Mills fought off his attackers. Pic: Dimitris Legakis/Athena Pictures/Shutterstock
Image:
Christopher Mills fought off his attackers. Pic: Dimitris Legakis/Athena Pictures/Shutterstock

A third person, Steven Thomas, was found not guilty of conspiracy to murder but pleaded guilty to a firearms charge.

Police were called on 20 September last year to reports that masked men carrying guns, later found to be Berry and Thomas, had raided a static caravan in Cenarth, Ceredigion.

Despite being badly beaten, Mr Mills was able to fight them off and they fled.

Michelle Mills, 46, called 999 to say her husband had a head injury and claimed she did not know the armed men who broke in.

Armed officers and a dog unit responded, and a police helicopter soon spotted Berry, 46, and Thomas, 47, hiding in undergrowth.

Gas masks and a fake suicide note were found on Berry and Thomas
Image:
Gas masks and a fake suicide note were found on Berry and Thomas


While searching Berry and Thomas, officers found gas masks and a typed suicide note addressed to Mills purporting to have been written by her husband.

Police quickly established that Mills, of Llangennech in Carmarthenshire, was linked to the plot.

Digital evidence revealed she and Berry – a former Royal Marine – had been in a secret relationship for around three months and had discussed ways to kill Mr Mills.

These included killing him with sleeping tablets, suffocating him in his sleep and poisoning him with antifreeze.

Berry also looked into how to make his victim’s Mini explode on start up.

Police said when Berry told Mills he was meeting with some “boys” to plan “what they are going to do with him”, she responded: “Yes, lovely, thank you.”

Imitation guns, pliers and cable ties were also part of the plotters' kit
Image:
Imitation guns, pliers and cable ties were also part of the plotters’ kit

Gas masks were ‘to set up a fake suicide’

Detective Inspector Sam Gregory said: “Berry and Mills had previously discussed using gas to kill Mr Mills, while making it look like he had taken his own life.

“Berry had asked Mills where the boiler was, and he and Thomas carried gas masks that would have protected themselves while Mr Mills suffocated.

“No explanation has been given by any of the three defendants for the fake suicide note or the gas masks in the rucksack.

“What’s clear is that these were not being used to frighten Mr Mills – they were there to set up a fake suicide.”

DI Gregory said the victim had no idea his wife of 10 years wanted him dead and believed they had a happy marriage.

An image taken from police bodyworn video showing Michelle Mills' arrest. Pic: PA
Image:
An image taken from police bodyworn video showing Michelle Mills’ arrest. Pic: PA

‘Your intention was to kill’

Judge Mr Justice Nicklin KC said the pair had not shown any remorse and they were only concerned with not getting caught.

“You devised the plan and led its execution,” he told Berry.

“You recruited Steven Thomas to assist you and while intoxicated, you equipped yourself with items that demonstrated your intention to kill Mr Mills and make it appear to be a suicide.

“However incompetent the plan was and how unlikely it was to be achieved, your intention was to kill.”

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The judge told Michelle Mills she had encouraged her lover.

He said: “The evidence strongly suggests in the weeks leading up to the incident, you cultivated and exploited Geraint Berry’s animosity towards your husband and encouraged him to find a way to get rid of your husband, not in fantasy but reality.”

The judge also praised Mr Mills’ “remarkable fortitude and courage” in fighting off the pair.

Steven Thomas was sentenced to 12 months but will be released immediately due to time served on remand.

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