- Priti Patel met political leaders and lobbyists during a 'private' holiday to Israel
- It is alleged official business was discussed without Foreign Office agreement
- However, no official probe is underway into any breaches of the ministerial code
By James Tapsfield, Political Editor For Mailonline
Published: 09:27 EST, 6 November 2017 | Updated: 09:35 EST, 6 November 2017
Priti Patel issued a grovelling apology today after admitting she held talks with the Israeli PM while on a 'family holiday'.
The International Development Secretary blamed her 'enthusiasm to engage' for her failure to tell Boris Johnson about a slew of meetings, including with Benjamin Netanyahu.
Mrs Patel conceded that 'in hindsight' she regretted the extraordinary breach of protocol, and was also forced to make an humiliating 'clarification' of comments last week when the row first emerged.



International Development secretary Priti Patel met Israeli officials during a 'private' holiday. Mr Johnson, pictured in Downing Street today, previously played down the row but there is thought to have been considerable anger behind the scenes
'This summer I travelled to Israel, on a family holiday paid for myself,' Mrs Patel said in a statement on the DfID website.
'While away I had the opportunity to meet a number of people and organisations. I am publishing a list of who I met. The Foreign and Commonwealth Office was aware of my visit while it was underway.
'In hindsight, I can see how my enthusiasm to engage in this way could be mis-read, and how meetings were set up and reported in a way which did not accord with the usual procedures. I am sorry for this and I apologise for it.
'My first and only aim as the Secretary of State for International Development is to put the interests of British taxpayers and the world's poor at the front of our development work.'
Mrs Patel was accompanied by an influential pro-Israeli Conservative lobbyist, Tory peer Lord Polak, who set up the meetings.
PATEL'S MEETINGS ON 'FAMILY HOLIDAY'
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
Yuval Rotem – Israeli Foreign Ministry
Gilad Erdan – Minister for Public Security, Information and Strategic Affairs
Yair Lapid – Leader of Yesh Atid, Israeli opposition party
IsraAID – emergency humanitarian aid NGO
Dr Aliza Inbal – Pears Programme for Global Innovation
Downing Street said last week that Mrs Patel was in Israel for a holiday she had paid for herself, and 'no investigation' was being carried out into whether she broke ministerial rules.
She was also backed by Foreign Secretary Mr Johnson.
However, there was considerable anger behind the scenes. One former minister said the allegations were 'ten times worse' than those that prompted the resignation of Liam Fox from the Cabinet in 2011.
And today it emerged that the scope of Mrs Patel's meeting was far wider than previously acknowledged.
Lord Polak is honorary president of the Conservative Friends of Israel lobbying group.
A former minister compared the row to Dr Fox's 2011 resignation as defence secretary after it emerged that he held unauthorised meetings with his friend Adam Werritty on a string of foreign trips.
Mr Werritty's travel was reportedly funded by firms that stood to benefit from government decisions.
'This is ten times worse than what Liam Fox had to resign for,' they said. 'She was with a donor/lobbyist meeting officials of a foreign government – that is not acceptable.
'She can't for a second claim this was just a social event when the meetings she had are having a direct influence on government policy.'


Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu was in London for talks with Mrs May and to mark a century a century since the Balfour Declaration
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