Report: Boris Johnson's Phone Number Was Online for 15 Years

Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson returns to Downing Street in London, Britain, April 28, 2021. REUTERS/Toby Melville
Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson returns to Downing Street in London, Britain, April 28, 2021. REUTERS/Toby Melville
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Report: Boris Johnson's Phone Number Was Online for 15 Years

Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson returns to Downing Street in London, Britain, April 28, 2021. REUTERS/Toby Melville
Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson returns to Downing Street in London, Britain, April 28, 2021. REUTERS/Toby Melville

The British government downplayed allegations Friday of a security risk after it was reported that Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s cellphone number has been circulating online for 15 years.

Celebrity website Popbitch revealed that the number was on a think tank press release from 2006, when Johnson was an opposition lawmaker and the Conservative Party’s higher education spokesman.

Callers to the number on Friday heard an automated message saying the phone was “switched off" and telling them to try later or to send a text.

The government denied there was a security lapse. Home Office minister Victoria Atkins insisted that the prime minister “knows his responsibilities when it comes to national security.”

She criticized the media for revealing the fact that the number was in the public domain.

British ministers are issued a government phone for official business, and receive security briefings from intelligence agencies on protecting their communications.

Treasury chief Rishi Sunak said that “as far as I’m aware, all security protocols have been followed.”

“Part of what makes the prime minister special is that he is an incredibly approachable individual," Sunak said.

But former National Security Adviser Peter Ricketts said that if the number was widely available, it could be used for eavesdropping by hostile nations “and possibly other non-state actors as well, like sophisticated criminal gangs.”

Johnson is already facing questions about his text and WhatsApp message exchanges with business leaders and lobbyists.

He has denied doing anything wrong when he exchanged text messages with industrialist James Dyson last year and promised he would “fix” the tax rules for Dyson if he agreed to make ventilators for the National Health Service.



Iran FM Says Israel Will ‘Deeply Regret’ Its Attack

A damaged high-rise building that was hit by Israeli air strikes, north of Tehran, Iran, 13 June 2025. (EPA)
A damaged high-rise building that was hit by Israeli air strikes, north of Tehran, Iran, 13 June 2025. (EPA)
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Iran FM Says Israel Will ‘Deeply Regret’ Its Attack

A damaged high-rise building that was hit by Israeli air strikes, north of Tehran, Iran, 13 June 2025. (EPA)
A damaged high-rise building that was hit by Israeli air strikes, north of Tehran, Iran, 13 June 2025. (EPA)

Israel’s targeted killings of officials and scientists were “clear instances of state terrorism,” Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said in a letter to the UN Security Council requesting an emergency meeting.

In the letter obtained by The Associated Press, he said Iran affirms its right to self-defense under the UN Charter.

“This right is non-negotiable,” Araghchi said. “Israel will come to deeply regret this reckless aggression and the grave strategic miscalculation it has made.”

The Iranian minister urged the Security Council, which will meet in New York on Friday, to “take urgent and concrete measures to hold the Israeli regime fully accountable for its crimes.”

Israel launched a wave of strikes across Iran on Friday that targeted its nuclear program and military sites, killing at least two top military officers and raising the prospect of an all-out war between the two bitter adversaries. It appeared to be the most significant attack Iran has faced since its 1980s war with Iraq.

The strikes came amid simmering tensions over Iran’s rapidly advancing nuclear program and appeared certain to trigger a reprisal. In its first response, Iran fired more than 100 drones at Israel. Israel said the drones were being intercepted outside its airspace, and it was not immediately clear whether any got through.

Israeli leaders cast the attack as necessary to head off an imminent threat that Iran would build nuclear bombs, though it remains unclear how close the country is to achieving that.

For years, Israel had threatened such a strike and successive American administrations had sought to prevent it, fearing it would ignite a wider conflict across the Middle East and possibly be ineffective at destroying Iran’s dispersed and hardened nuclear program.