British Airways has cancelled all flights to the Egyptian capital Cairo for a week as a security "precaution".
Passengers about to board a BA flight to the city from London's Heathrow Airport were told that it was cancelled - and that there would be no alternative flights for a week.
The airline did not specify what the security issue was.
A spokesman for Cairo airport told the BBC the airport had yet to be notified by BA of any such changes.
A BA spokesman said: "We constantly review our security arrangements at all our airports around the world, and have suspended flights to Cairo for seven days as a precaution to allow for further assessment.
"The safety and security of our customers and crew is always our priority, and we would never operate an aircraft unless it was safe to do so."
German airline Lufthansa also cancelled flights to Cairo on Saturday. However, flights to the city would resume on Sunday, a spokesman said.
'Handled badly'
Christine Shelbourne, 70, from Surrey was due to go to Cairo for a week on Saturday with her 11-year-old grandson. She said she managed to check into the flight at 1500 (1400 GMT). However, her boarding card wouldn't open the barriers.
She said: "The check-in staff reissued my boarding pass and I tried again but that didn't work either and we were told to try again in half an hour.
"Whether they knew anything I don't know, but my husband told me the flight had been cancelled before they did. There were no suggestions or help from staff about alternative flights."
"My 11-year-old grandson is heartbroken - he's been looking forward to the trip for months. We're just not going now," she added.
"It was handled badly to be honest. My grandson is currently looking for flights for us - he's devastated."
One passenger named Dan said the airline had given customers £5 food vouchers "meant to last 24 hours".
Michael Khalil, 42, from Guildford says he is about £1,200 out of pocket as a result of his flight being cancelled.
He was booked on the flight earlier on Saturday but ran to Terminal 2 and used his own money to book onto another flight.
Mr Khalil works in training and development. He says he has an important business meeting on Monday and told the BBC: "I have no choice. I have to be there."
Safaa Almaghrabi was due to fly to Cairo on 24 July with her husband and six children for her sister's wedding on 26 July.
The 31-year-old says she cannot find any direct flights. When there were some available earlier on Saturday, they were more than £35,000 for the whole family.
She told the BBC: "We contacted British Airways and they had two nonsense solutions. The first was to book us a flight on the 31st July, the earliest flight they can. And this way we'll miss the wedding."
They also offered her a full refund which she says is "really disappointing and unfair."
The only indirect flights she can find are via Dubai, and Jordan which she said "will be horrible for six kids."
She said: "I cannot afford to go but I have to go."
The advice includes the warning: "There's a heightened risk of terrorism against aviation. Additional security measures are in place for flights departing from Egypt to the UK."
Following the bomb explosion that destroyed a Russian airliner over Egypt's Sinai peninsula in October 2015 after it had departed Sharm El Sheikh airport, the UK was one of a number of countries to temporarily suspend flights to and from the country.
The Foreign Office continues to advise against travel to certain parts of Egypt.
Have you been affected by flights to Cairo being cancelled by British Airways? Please get in touch by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk
Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist. You can also contact us in the following ways:
British Airways has cancelled all flights to the Egyptian capital Cairo for a week as a security "precaution".
Passengers about to board a BA flight to the city from London's Heathrow Airport were told that it was cancelled - and that there would be no alternative flights for a week.
The airline did not specify what the security issue was.
A spokesman for Cairo airport told the BBC the airport had yet to be notified by BA of any such changes.
A BA spokesman said: "We constantly review our security arrangements at all our airports around the world, and have suspended flights to Cairo for seven days as a precaution to allow for further assessment.
"The safety and security of our customers and crew is always our priority, and we would never operate an aircraft unless it was safe to do so."
German airline Lufthansa also cancelled flights to Cairo on Saturday. However, flights to the city would resume on Sunday, a spokesman said.
'Handled badly'
Christine Shelbourne, 70, from Surrey was due to go to Cairo for a week on Saturday with her 11-year-old grandson. She said she managed to check into the flight at 1500 (1400 GMT). However, her boarding card wouldn't open the barriers.
She said: "The check-in staff reissued my boarding pass and I tried again but that didn't work either and we were told to try again in half an hour.
"Whether they knew anything I don't know, but my husband told me the flight had been cancelled before they did. There were no suggestions or help from staff about alternative flights."
"My 11-year-old grandson is heartbroken - he's been looking forward to the trip for months. We're just not going now," she added.
"It was handled badly to be honest. My grandson is currently looking for flights for us - he's devastated."
One passenger named Dan said the airline had given customers £5 food vouchers "meant to last 24 hours".
Michael Khalil, 42, from Guildford says he is about £1,200 out of pocket as a result of his flight being cancelled.
He was booked on the flight earlier on Saturday but ran to Terminal 2 and used his own money to book onto another flight.
Mr Khalil works in training and development. He says he has an important business meeting on Monday and told the BBC: "I have no choice. I have to be there."
Safaa Almaghrabi was due to fly to Cairo on 24 July with her husband and six children for her sister's wedding on 26 July.
The 31-year-old says she cannot find any direct flights. When there were some available earlier on Saturday, they were more than £35,000 for the whole family.
She told the BBC: "We contacted British Airways and they had two nonsense solutions. The first was to book us a flight on the 31st July, the earliest flight they can. And this way we'll miss the wedding."
They also offered her a full refund which she says is "really disappointing and unfair."
The only indirect flights she can find are via Dubai, and Jordan which she said "will be horrible for six kids."
She said: "I cannot afford to go but I have to go."
The advice includes the warning: "There's a heightened risk of terrorism against aviation. Additional security measures are in place for flights departing from Egypt to the UK."
Following the bomb explosion that destroyed a Russian airliner over Egypt's Sinai peninsula in October 2015 after it had departed Sharm El Sheikh airport, the UK was one of a number of countries to temporarily suspend flights to and from the country.
The Foreign Office continues to advise against travel to certain parts of Egypt.
Have you been affected by flights to Cairo being cancelled by British Airways? Please get in touch by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk
Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist. You can also contact us in the following ways:
British Airways has cancelled all flights to the Egyptian capital Cairo for a week as a security "precaution".
Passengers about to board a BA flight to the city from London's Heathrow Airport were told that it was cancelled - and that there would be no alternative flights for a week.
The airline did not specify what the security issue was.
A spokesman for Cairo airport told the BBC the airport had yet to be notified by BA of any such changes.
A BA spokesman said: "We constantly review our security arrangements at all our airports around the world, and have suspended flights to Cairo for seven days as a precaution to allow for further assessment.
"The safety and security of our customers and crew is always our priority, and we would never operate an aircraft unless it was safe to do so."
'Handled badly'
Christine Shelbourne, 70, from Surrey was due to go to Cairo for a week on Saturday with her 11-year-old grandson. She said she managed to check into the flight at 1500 (1400 GMT). However, her boarding card wouldn't open the barriers.
She said: "The check-in staff reissued my boarding pass and I tried again but that didn't work either and we were told to try again in half an hour.
"Whether they knew anything I don't know but my husband told me the flight had been cancelled before they did. There were no suggestions or help from staff about alternative flights."
"My 11-year-old grandson is heartbroken - he's been looking forward to the trip for months. We're just not going now," she added.
"It was handled badly to be honest. My grandson is currently looking for flights for us - he's devastated."
One passenger named Dan said the airline had given customers £5 food vouchers "meant to last 24 hours".
The advice includes the warning: "There's a heightened risk of terrorism against aviation. Additional security measures are in place for flights departing from Egypt to the UK."
BBC Afrique's Pierre-Antoine Denis, in Cairo, reports that all other airlines that use the airport are operating normally.
Following the bomb explosion that destroyed a Russian airliner over Egypt's Sinai peninsula in October 2015 after it had departed Sharm El Sheikh airport, the UK was one of a number of countries to temporarily suspend flights to and from the country.
The Foreign Office continues to advise against travel to certain parts of Egypt.
Have you been affected by flights to Cairo being cancelled by British Airways? Please get in touch by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk
Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist. You can also contact us in the following ways:
British Airways has cancelled all flights to the Egyptian capital Cairo for a week as a security "precaution".
Passengers about to board a BA flight to the city from London's Heathrow Airport were told that it was cancelled - and that there would be no alternative flights for a week.
The airline did not specify what the security issue was.
A spokesman for Cairo airport told the BBC the airport had yet to be notified by BA of any such changes.
A BA spokesman said: "We constantly review our security arrangements at all our airports around the world, and have suspended flights to Cairo for seven days as a precaution to allow for further assessment.
"The safety and security of our customers and crew is always our priority, and we would never operate an aircraft unless it was safe to do so."
'Handled badly'
Christine Shelbourne, 70, from Surrey was due to go to Cairo for a week on Saturday with her 11-year-old grandson. She said she managed to check into the flight at 1500 (1400 GMT). However, her boarding card wouldn't open the barriers.
She said: "The check-in staff reissued my boarding pass and I tried again but that didn't work either and we were told to try again in half an hour.
"Whether they knew anything I don't know but my husband told me the flight had been cancelled before they did. There were no suggestions or help from staff about alternative flights."
"My 11-year-old grandson is heartbroken - he's been looking forward to the trip for months. We're just not going now," she added.
"It was handled badly to be honest. My grandson is currently looking for flights for us - he's devastated."
One passenger named Dan said the airline had given customers £5 food vouchers "meant to last 24 hours".
The advice includes the warning: "There's a heightened risk of terrorism against aviation. Additional security measures are in place for flights departing from Egypt to the UK."
BBC Afrique's Pierre-Antoine Denis, in Cairo, reports that all other airlines that use the airport are operating normally.
Following the bomb explosion that destroyed a Russian airliner over Egypt's Sinai peninsula in October 2015 after it had departed Sharm El Sheikh airport, the UK was one of a number of countries to temporarily suspend flights to and from the country.
The Foreign Office continues to advise against travel to certain parts of Egypt.
Have you been affected by flights to Cairo being cancelled by British Airways? Please get in touch by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk
Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist. You can also contact us in the following ways:
The British-flagged tanker, the Stena Impero, has become a pawn in the widening crisis between the Islamic Republic and Western powers in the Persian Gulf, as Iran fights to free itself from the crippling effects of continued American economic sanctions.
"This is classic Iranian escalatory behavior designed to show it can also push back," Sanam Vakil, senior research fellow at Chatham House in London, told CNN on Saturday.
But there could be serious consequences for Iran's aggression toward the UK, as it seeks to renew nuclear talks.
Iran's actions in the Strait came just hours after authorities in Gibraltar agreed to extend the detention of an Iranian oil tanker in its custody for 30 days. That ship, the Grace 1, was seized by British authorities on July 4, accused of attempting to transport oil to Syria in violation of European Union sanctions.
"The dangerous strategy for Iran is that this could push the UK closer to the United States and result in greater coordination between the two allies," Vakil said.
The UK -- one of three EU countries party to the Iran nuclear deal -- has worked to maintain the landmark agreement even after its ally, the US, dropped out. But Iran's escalation in the Strait makes that balancing act between saving the deal and appeasing Washington increasingly difficult.
Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt said on Twitter Saturday that the incident showed "worrying signs Iran may be choosing a dangerous path of illegal and destabilising behavior," adding that the UK's response would be "considered, but robust."
There is no place in the world more important for the global supply of oil than the Strait of Hormuz.
The channel, which is only 21 miles (33.7 kilometers) wide at its narrowest point, is the only way to move oil from the Persian Gulf to the world's oceans. And that's why the seizure of a British-flagged ship in the strait Friday is such a concern.
If the Strait were to be closed,it would be a massive blow to the world's economy.
The Strait of Hormuz, which links the Gulf of Oman and the Persian Gulf, "is the world's most important choke point," said the US Energy Information Administration.
The Strait is even narrower than its 21-mile width suggests. The shipping channels that can handle massive supertankers are only two miles wide heading in and out of the Gulf, forcing ships to pass through Iranian and Omani territorial waters.
And the amount of oil that passes through the channel is staggering, with roughly 80% of the crude it handles destined for markets in Asia. The world's global economy could not function without that supply of oil lubricating it.
About 22.5 million barrels of oil a day passed through the Strait of Hormuz on average since the start of 2018, according to Vortexa, an energy analytics firm. That's roughly 24% of daily global oil production, and nearly 30% of oil moving over the world's oceans.
In British PM race, a former Russian tycoon quietly wields influence
Publicly, industrialist and Conservative Party donor Alexander Temerko presents himself as an opponent of Brexit and a dissident critic of Vladimir Putin. In conversations with this reporter, he’s voiced strong support for Boris Johnson’s bid to lead Britain out of the EU, praised senior Russian intelligence officials and spoken about his past work with the Kremlin.
By Catherine Belton
Filed
LONDON - For almost a decade, Alexander Temerko, who forged a career at the top of the Russian arms industry and had connections at the highest levels of the Kremlin, has been an influential figure in British politics. He’s one of the Conservative Party’s major donors. He counts Boris Johnson, the frontrunner to be Britain’s next PM, among his friends.
Temerko, born in what was then Soviet Ukraine, presents himself in public as an entrepreneur who opposes Britain’s departure from the European Union because it’s bad for his UK energy business, and as a dissident critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
But in more than half a dozen conversations with this reporter, conducted over the past three years as part of research for a book, he showed a different side of his career and views.
Temerko revealed himself to be a supporter of Johnson’s bid to lead Britain out of the EU, describing the 2016 public vote to leave the bloc as a “revolution against bureaucracy.” He praised senior Russian security officials, including the current and former heads of the Federal Security Service (FSB), successor to the KGB, and proudly recalled his past work with Russia’s Defence Ministry.
These new insights into Temerko’s private thinking about Johnson, Brexit and Russia come as the ruling Conservative Party is choosing its next leader, and as some British MPs are increasingly wary of possible Russian influence over British politics.
The result of the Conservative Party leadership contest is expected on July 23.
Temerko has gifted more than £1 million to the Conservatives since he gained British citizenship in 2011, electoral finance records show - a significant amount by UK standards.
Johnson is not among the politicians recorded as having received donations from Temerko. But the industrialist has financed some of Johnson’s important allies in parliament, including one of the men running his campaign for the Tory leadership, James Wharton, who also serves as a paid adviser to the UK energy firm where Temerko is a director.
Temerko spoke warmly about his “friend” Johnson, telling how the two men sometimes call each other “Sasha,” the Russian diminutive for Alexander, which is Johnson’s real first name. He described how, at the beginning of Johnson’s tenure as Foreign Secretary from 2016 to 2018, they would often “plot” late into the evening over a bottle of wine on the balcony of Johnson’s office at parliament in Westminster.
Johnson’s press secretary Lee Cain didn’t respond to repeated requests for comment for this article. The Conservative Party said only that “donations to the Conservative Party are properly and transparently declared to the Electoral Commission, published by them, and fully comply with the law.”
In one conversation in February this year, Temerko said he’d joined an unsuccessful attempt led by members of a group of hardline Conservative MPs, the European Research Group, to remove Theresa May as leader in December 2018. The MPs were unhappy at May’s failure to take Britain out of the EU almost three years after Britons voted to leave. Temerko didn’t detail his role in the move, but a senior Conservative Party member confirmed that Temerko was “very much behind the attempt to oust” May. The party member declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter. May finally resigned on June 7.
Jacob Rees Mogg, chairman of the European Research Group, said in response to Reuters’ questions that Temerko “has no link formal or informal” with the group. Rees Mogg said he didn’t know Temerko, but couldn’t speak for Temerko’s relationship with individual MPs. May’s office referred Reuters’ questions about the episode to the Conservative Party, which didn’t comment.
In the same conversation in February, Temerko spoke in positive terms about one of Putin’s closest and most powerful allies, Nikolai Patrushev, the hawkish head of Russia’s Security Council and former long-time head of the FSB security service, describing him as a “decent family man.” On another occasion, he said of Patrushev, “There is much more positive than negative about him.”
One of Temerko’s former business partners in Russia, Leonid Nevzlin, said Temerko had long-standing ties with Russian security agencies, but declined to say whether he believes those ties remain active. Nevzlin and Temerko were shareholders in oil firm Yukos, before Putin’s government seized control of the company. Nevzlin, who was one of the main shareholders, said Yukos’s management brought Temerko in “for several projects as well as for his contacts at the top of the Federal Security Service and the Defence Ministry.” Nevzlin added that Temerko knew Patrushev “well.”
Asked to respond, Temerko said in a follow-up interview this week that his role at Yukos encompassed the oil company’s connections with the entire Russian state, not just with the Defence Ministry. His relations with people in the security services, he added, were “formal” and not “personal.” He denied having any ongoing links with Russian security services.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Temerko “has no connection to the Kremlin or the Russian authorities. We do not know this gentleman.” Reuters couldn’t reach Patrushev for comment.
“Jeremy is very dangerous. He really does occupy the centre ground. He’s very clever. He’s a person of the system.”
Asked this week about the apparent contradiction between his private and public statements on Brexit, Temerko said his views changed with time and he was “evolutionary.” He said he joined the push to oust May because he thought she should be more flexible in negotiating a route out of the EU.
In recent weeks, as Johnson’s campaign gathered pace, Temerko has appeared to distance himself from his friend. In an interview with the Daily Telegraph in June, Temerko said he was switching support from Johnson to his rival, Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt, over Johnson’s apparent willingness to take Britain out of the EU without securing an agreement over the terms of the withdrawal. Temerko repeated this stance in a blog post for the Huffington Post on July 3, calling for Conservatives to reject the “fairytale” being offered by the “fun blonde guy,” a reference to the fair-haired Johnson.
As recently as February, Temerko told this reporter: “Jeremy is very dangerous. He really does occupy the centre ground. He's very clever. He’s a person of the system.” There is no record of Temerko providing any financing to Hunt, and none of Temerko’s longstanding allies work on the Hunt campaign. A spokesperson for Hunt declined to comment.
“We know the Kremlin seeks to disrupt, destabilise and influence our democracy in a number of ways.”
This portrait of Temerko and his activity comes as some MPs worry about possible Russian interference in British democracy. In February this year, parliament’s committee overseeing digital and media matters called on the government to investigate attempts by Russia to influence the June 2016 referendum on Britain’s EU membership, amid growing evidence in the United States and elsewhere that the Kremlin has been pursuing a campaign to divide and disrupt Western democracies.
Ben Bradshaw, a senior Labour parliamentarian who was the first MP to raise concern about potential Kremlin interference in the 2016 Brexit referendum, said Reuters’ findings were “extremely troubling.”
“We know the Kremlin seeks to disrupt, destabilise and influence our democracy in a number of ways. We must have complete confidence that the close relationships between Conservative politicians and Russian business people with ties to the Putin regime are above board and free from Kremlin influencing operations. The fact that an ex Tory MP who is running Johnson’s leadership campaign is employed by Mr Temerko is extraordinary.”
The senior Conservative with knowledge of Temerko’s efforts to remove May said some members of the party had distanced themselves from the businessman in recent months, as concerns have grown over Temerko’s Russian connections. But “others,” he said with reference to Johnson, were “still close.” The party member indicated that Conservative Chairman Brandon Lewis and Sir Graham Brady, then the head of the Conservative Party’s 1922 Committee, a parliamentary group, had been briefed about these concerns. The source declined to give further details about the briefings. Brady did not respond to an emailed request for comment. A spokesperson for Lewis declined to comment. The Conservative Party didn’t comment.
Electoral Commission records show Temerko, and UK companies linked to him, have made donations to 11 individual MPs, including Lewis, the chairman of the Tory Party, while helping fund as many as 27 local branches of the Conservative Party in areas where Tory MPs won election in the north of England, Wales and London. There is no record of him providing funds to Johnson or to his constituency, and this year much of his funding activity seems to have petered out.
In the February 2019 conversation, as May faced overwhelming parliamentary opposition to her EU withdrawal agreement, Temerko forecast that if Brexit isn’t implemented, “the time of the mainstream parties will end,” and “the old system will be destroyed.” His friend Johnson, he predicted then, could lead a new movement backing Brexit.
Those comments about a new political era chimed with remarks by Russian President Vladimir Putin. In an interview with the Financial Times in June, Putin trumpeted the rise of national populist movements in Europe and the United States, saying that “the liberal idea has become obsolete.” Putin has rarely commented directly on Brexit, which he says is a matter for the British people. At his annual press conference in December 2018, he decried the idea of holding a second referendum on Brexit and said the UK government had to implement Britain’s departure from the EU, otherwise faith in democratic procedures would be undermined.
From Russia to London
Temerko rose to prominence in the Russia arms industry in the 1990s, in the wild days that followed the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Three former Russian business partners, including Nevzlin, as well as a former Russian intelligence officer, said Temerko grew close with the Russian security services. Those ties were forged in the 1990s, these people said, when Temerko served as head of a state committee for the military and later as head of a strategic Russian state arms company known as Russkoye Oruzhie, or Russian Weapons. Russkoye Oruzhie no longer exists.
Temerko cultivated close relations with the Russian defence minister of the early 1990s, Pavel Grachev. Temerko has described the late Grachev as his “handler.” Temerko has boasted to this reporter that he himself had three-star and four-star Russian generals working under him.
In 1999, Temerko became a member of the board and significant shareholder at one of the new Russia’s most successful companies, Yukos, led by the charismatic billionaire Mikhail Khodorkovsky. Temerko said he helped Yukos secure a lucrative contract to supply the Russian army with oil. As head of the firm’s government relations, he’d also led a push by Yukos to build an oil pipeline to China and, according to one of the former business partners, he’d travelled with other Yukos officials on many business trips they made abroad.
“He knew the Russian ambassadors and consuls of every country,” this former business partner said. Temerko said he knew many but not all of them.
Things went sour for Yukos when Khodorkovsky tried to build a political power base for himself.
When Khodorkovsky was arrested and jailed on fraud charges in October 2003, Temerko was the only Yukos shareholder who remained in the country to negotiate with the Kremlin. The remaining shareholders fled fearing they would face arrest. Temerko told how his standing with the Kremlin was such that he was able to try to negotiate about ways to preserve Yukos and secure Khodorkovsky’s release directly with Igor Sechin, the then-deputy head of the Kremlin administration and the Putin security man seen as the mastermind behind the Kremlin campaign to take over Yukos.
Temerko said that in those days his status meant he was essentially untouchable. His security ties, he said, once got him access to a meeting of the Russian Security Council, the circle of 24 top Russian officials, chaired by Putin, who steer national security policy.
In the event, Khodorkovsky remained in jail for 10 years, while Temerko also fled. Sechin has previously denied orchestrating the legal campaign to take over Yukos. Sechin could not be reached for comment for this article.
New friends in high places
Temerko arrived in Britain in 2005, saying he was a refugee from the politically charged takeover of Yukos. The Russian government had charged him with defrauding the state oil major Rosneft. Temerko denied the charge, saying the case was part of the Russian government’s campaign against Yukos and its former top managers. The High Court in London declined a Russian request for Temerko’s extradition in December 2005, saying it was politically motivated. The case bolstered his standing as a Russian dissident who’d suffered at the hands of the Russian state, helping secure his footing as a donor who could be trusted.
Temerko’s donations translated into access. In 2014, he was appointed by the local branch of the party as a vice-president of the Cities of London and Westminster Conservative Association, which delivered even greater opportunity to mix with leading Tories. Temerko also became part of Conservative Party donor club The Leader’s Group, where £50,000 in annual membership fees grants access to the prime minister and other senior ministers at dinners, cocktail receptions and other events. In the conversations of the last three years, Temerko boasted he played an important role in securing election victories for the Conservative Party at a time when it “was fighting for every vote.”
Together with OGN Group, a major steel manufacturer in the UK’s northeast, where he served as director, he said he’d sponsored 40 members of parliament in previous elections. “My business was one of the biggest businesses that supported the Conservative Party and its deputies in northern England,” he said in the February 2019 conversation, adding he’d brought in supporters from Britain’s East European minority. OGN Group is now in liquidation. The Conservative Party didn’t comment.
In public remarks, Temerko has consistently said he opposes Brexit because it will damage his UK business interests, which now centre on a firm, Aquind Ltd, developing an undersea electric power link between Britain and France. On his website he says he is a “vocal supporter” of British membership of the EU.
While Temerko has publicly spoken out against Brexit, and has made donations to parliamentarians who campaigned to remain in the EU, at least two Conservative politicians close to Temerko played key roles on the Brexit side in the run-up to the June 2016 referendum.
One of them is Wharton, a former Conservative MP who is overseeing Johnson’s leadership campaign, at the same time as being a paid adviser to the power firm Aquind Ltd where Temerko is a director. In June 2013, Wharton put forward the parliamentary bill that first called for a referendum on Britain’s EU membership. Temerko made £25,000 in political donations to Wharton between 2013 and 2015, disclosures to parliament show, a relatively large figure for an individual British MP, helping fund his re-election in 2015 in a constituency neighbouring Temerko’s OGN Group steel works. Wharton didn’t respond to a request for comment.
The minister of state for exiting the EU, Martin Callanan, served on the board of Temerko’s Aquind from May 2016 to June 2017, at which time he joined the government. Callanan didn’t respond to a request for comment.
In a conversation with this reporter in July 2016, shortly after Britons voted to leave the EU, Temerko was jubilant about the possibilities of Johnson leading Britain’s exit from the bloc. By then, Johnson was the most powerful figure in the “Leave” campaign.
“We know that if Boris is our elected leader then our party membership will grow. There would be massive support for our party at election,” he said at the time. The vote to leave the EU, he added, was “a revolution against bureaucracy.”
During the same conversation, Temerko said “a group of East European businessmen” had helped sway Johnson into siding in February 2016 with campaigners for Britain’s departure from the EU after months of sitting on the fence. But Temerko declined to name any of these East European businessmen and declined to repeat this comment.
Temerko’s allies are at the helm of Johnson’s campaign.
Wharton, the adviser to Temerko’s power firm Aquind Ltd, has overseen the day to day running of Johnson’s campaign, particularly in its initial stages.
Gavin Williamson, the former UK defence secretary whom Temerko has frequently described as “a good lad,” helped lead Johnson’s campaign to win the support of his parliamentary colleagues to replace Theresa May. Conservative parliamentarians whittled the field down to two candidates in a series of votes in June before handing the final choice to the party’s estimated 160,000 members. Williamson declined to comment.
Temerko says he is “friends” with political strategist Sir Lynton Crosby, whose firm, CTF Partners, gave Johnson a £20,000 interest free loan and a £3,000 cash donation late last year, according to a disclosure to parliament by Johnson. A co-founder of CTF, Mark Fullbrook, is the Johnson campaign’s chief executive. Crosby declined to comment. CTF says it isn’t involved in the Johnson campaign and Fullbrook is on a leave of absence, working voluntarily for Johnson’s leadership bid.
Temerko has said his days as a power player in Moscow are over. He has told this reporter he is now persona non-grata with the Russian authorities, especially after he publicly called in 2015 for the UK to supply weapons to Ukraine to assist it in its war with pro-Kremlin separatists on the grounds that only a show of force would stop the conflict.
“They consider that I am among those who directed the UK government against them. I am a warmonger. I am more of an enemy now than when I was in Yukos,” he said.
Kremlin spokesman Peskov said he couldn’t comment because he doesn’t know who Temerko is.
Temerko retains at least one powerful connection, however.
One of Temerko’s former business partners said the industrialist is in contact with Andrei Guryev, the owner of Russian fertilizer giant Phosagro. Guryev, too, has become a notable figure in Britain. He owns Witanhurst, a vast estate in Highgate in the north of London that is the UK’s second biggest house after Buckingham Palace. Guryev declined to comment.
Temerko confirmed his friendship with Guryev. “Guryev is a good guy,” Temerko said. “He’s a very nice character. He’s a sportsman. He’s a kind fellow.”
Alexander Temerko’s circle, past and present
Alexander Temerko – a Conservative Party donor who was born in Soviet Ukraine and forged a career at the top of the Russian arms industry.
Nikolai Patrushev – the head of Russia’s Security Council and former long-time head of Russia’s FSB security service.
Leonid Nevzlin – one of Temerko’s former business partners in Russia. Nevzlin and Temerko were shareholders in oil firm Yukos.
Pavel Grachev – Russian defence minister of the early 1990s. Temerko has described the late Grachev as his “handler.”
Igor Sechin – the then-deputy head of the Kremlin administration. Sechin now heads state oil firm Rosneft.
Mikhail Khodorkovsky – Yukos’ main owner. He was arrested and jailed on fraud charges in 2003 and spent 10 years in prison.
Andrei Guryev – the owner of Russian fertilizer giant Phosagro.
Boris Johnson – the frontrunner to be the next Conservative Party leader, and Britain’s next PM.
James Wharton – a former Conservative MP who is overseeing Johnson’s leadership campaign and is a paid adviser to power firm Aquind Ltd where Temerko is a director.
Martin Callanan – Britain’s minister of state for exiting the EU. He served on the board of Temerko’s Aquind from May 2016 to June 2017.
Gavin Williamson – the former UK defence secretary helped lead Johnson’s campaign to win the support of his parliamentary colleagues to replace Theresa May
Sir Lynton Crosby – a political strategist, whose firm, CTF Partners, gave Johnson a £20,000 interest free loan and a £3,000 cash donation late last year, according to a disclosure to parliament by Johnson.