Boris Johnson shows off his dad dancing during visit to village school in Peru

Boris Johnson showed off his dad dancing during a visit to a village school in Peru and went close-up with a manatee as he took a trip to the Amazon rain forest.

Mr Johnson became the first UK Foreign Secretary in more than half a century to visit Peru on the opening leg of a five-day tour of Latin America.

He hit the makeshift dancefloor when he visited a village school in Santa Marta, on the bank of the Amazon.

As school children performed a dance to a pounding drumbeat, the Foreign Secretary took the hand of infant class teacher Adriana Pinedo and led her out to join them.

Boris Johnson dances with infant class teacher Adriana Pinedo
PA

Wearing a crumpled shirt and jeans, Mr Johnson would be forced to admit his performance was not quite Strictly standard, as he twirled Miss Pinedo around to cheers from her pupils.

His Amazon trip was designed to back up the Foreign Office's drive for closer trade and cultural links with South American states including Peru following Brexit.

The Santa Marta school has benefited from a UK-funded solar power scheme to provide it with electricity.

As the children excitedly told him it meant they would be able to follow the Peru team in this summer's football World Cup, Mr Johnson came close to a gaffe, when he told them: "England is in the World Cup too. We're not so... I'd better be careful what I say."

Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson meets pupils, parents and staff during a visit to the village school in Santa Marta
PA

During his visit to Santa Marta the Foreign Secretary took on to feed a manatee calf with a milk bottle.

The encounter took place in the Amazon Rescue Centre near the town of Iquitos, after he flew in with the country's president Martin Vizcarra and foreign minister Nestor Popolizio.

Mr Johnson's encounter with the manatee was followed by the signing of an agreement for Peru to be a partner in a conference on fighting the illegal trade in wildlife being hosted by the UK in London in October.

Mr Johnson joked that the plump, slow-moving creature had reminded him of a particular Member of Parliament, but he refused to say who.

Manatees are threatened in the Amazon as local people hunt them for meat and use their young as pets.

Boris Johnson attempts to feed manatees that have been rescued from illegal trafficking
PA

Mr Johnson also stroked a baby black spider monkey - or maquisapa negra - rescued by rangers after its parents were killed by poachers, and met a three toed sloth hanging from a hand rail.

He later visited a stadium being constructed in Lima for next year's 2019 Pan Am Games athletic tournament, which Peru is hosting.

Britain is already using its experience from the 2012 London Olympics to support the project and UK firms are expected to be bidding for construction contracts as building work continues.

Boris Johnson is shown a baby black spider monkey (maquisapa negra) that was rescued by rangers after its parents were killed by poachers
PA

On Sunday, he is due to move on to Argentina, where he will become the first foreign secretary to visit since 1993, as the UK tries to reset a relationship with Buenos Aires which was thrust into the deep freeze by the bellicose approach to the Falklands of presidents Nestor Kirchner and Cristina Kirchner between 2003 and 2015.

The arrival of Mauricio Macri as president has seen Argentina dial down its rhetoric on the disputed islands and seek engagement with the wider world, including by hosting the G20 this year.

Mr Johnson will attend a meeting of G20 foreign ministers in Buenos Aires on Monday, and Theresa May is due to become the first prime minister since Tony Blair in 2001 to visit Argentina when she takes part in the leaders' summit in November.