Daily Mail

Have Air Miles Andy files been destroyed?

Official papers on duke’s trade envoy role vanish

- By Natasha Livingston­e and Mark Hookham

OFFICIAL documents that could shed light on Prince Andrew’s controvers­ial role as Britain’s trade envoy may have been destroyed.

The Government has admitted that memos, emails and cables sent between officials about the Duke of York’s foreign visits when he was a roving trade ambassador ‘may no longer be retained’.

Under a so-called ‘retention policy’, the Department for Business and Trade (DBT) send documents of ‘ historical importance’ to the National Archives in Kew, southwest London, or destroy them.

Last night, former diplomat Simon Wilson, who was involved with a

‘Details should be made public’

number of Andrew’s trade envoy visits while at the British embassy in Bahrain in the early 2000s, said: ‘The Duke of York was directly employed by the Government and details of his visits should be in the public domain.’

The mystery surroundin­g their whereabout­s comes after The Mail on Sunday previously revealed how Prince Andrew exploited his role to push the business interests of his close friend, the multi- millionair­e financier David Rowland.

Royal biographer Andrew Lownie has used the Freedom of Informatio­n Act to request documents from 2001 about the people who accompanie­d the duke on his trade trips, his work schedule and any correspond­ence between officials and the duke’s private office. But the DBT, a successor of the body that, with the Foreign Office, oversaw Andrew’s visits, said it did not hold the informatio­n.

The Informatio­n Commission­er’s Office, which probed how officials responded to Dr Lownie’s request, said that even if such informatio­n previously existed ‘it may no longer be retained’. Dr Lownie said he has not been able to find the informatio­n in the National Archives and – despite repeated requests from the Mail – the DBT refused to say whether the documents had been destroyed.

Dr Lownie said: ‘I think there are a lot of questions.’ He suggested that a failure to answer the questions may result in the appearance of a cover-up.

Such papers are generally kept for up to 20 years, before ‘records of historical value’ are transferre­d to the National Archives, which defines informatio­n of historical value as that which reflects ‘the “what, why and how” of government’.

The DBT said: ‘The department has complied with our obligation­s under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act, and this was confirmed by the Informatio­n Commission­er’s Office.’

 ?? ?? Business travel: Prince Andrew at a military display in Abu Dhabi in November 2010
Business travel: Prince Andrew at a military display in Abu Dhabi in November 2010

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