Tag Archives: Sheikh

Manchester United sale: Club denies reports of ‘negotiating exclusivity’ with Qatar’s Sheikh Jassim – CBS Sports

  1. Manchester United sale: Club denies reports of ‘negotiating exclusivity’ with Qatar’s Sheikh Jassim CBS Sports
  2. Rio Reacts – Manchester United’s Qatari Takeover Bid Update. Rio Ferdinand Presents FIVE
  3. Exclusive: Manchester Utd negotiating exclusivity with Qatar’s Sheikh Jassim in $6 billion-plus sale talks Reuters
  4. Abdulrahman Abdulla Al-Ansari named as Nine Two Foundation company director United In Focus – Manchester United FC News
  5. Bad news for Man Utd! New owners won’t be decided before start of next season as takeover process drags on Goal.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Manchester United sale: Two confirmed bidders as Sheikh Jassim bin Hamad al-Thani rivals Sir Jim Ratcliffe – CBS Sports

  1. Manchester United sale: Two confirmed bidders as Sheikh Jassim bin Hamad al-Thani rivals Sir Jim Ratcliffe CBS Sports
  2. Qataris, Ratcliffe Confirm Manchester United Bids and Appeal to Fans Sportico
  3. Man Utd get late-night American bid! Ex-AC Milan owners enter £5bn takeover chase – but could allow Glazer family to keep financial ties to club Goal.com
  4. Breakingviews – Soccer’s new M&A binge will mostly benefit players Reuters
  5. The human rights issues surrounding Sheikh Jassim Bin Hamad Al Thani’s Man United bid The Peoples Person
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Manchester United Takeover: Qatari Royal Sheikh Jassim Confirms Bid – Bloomberg

  1. Manchester United Takeover: Qatari Royal Sheikh Jassim Confirms Bid Bloomberg
  2. Sheikh Jassim’s Manchester United takeover bid, the Qatar issue and what it means for Ratcliffe The Athletic
  3. Let the bidding commence! Qatari investors table substantial debt-free offer to buy Man Utd in attempt to ‘return the club to its former glories’ Goal.com
  4. Qatar-based bid for Manchester United confirmed on deadline day Al Jazeera English
  5. Sir Jim Ratcliffe makes official bid to complete full takeover of Manchester United The Athletic
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Prince Charles took millions in cash from Qatari sheikh: report

Prince Charles personally accepted suitcases and shopping bags stuffed with millions of dollars’ worth of cash from a controversial Qatari politician between 2011 and 2015, according to an explosive new report.

“Everyone felt very uncomfortable about the situation,” a former adviser to the Prince of Wales told the Sunday Times of London.

The “only thing we could do was to count the money and make a mutual record of what we’d done,” the source said. “And then call the bank.”

Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber Al Thani, the former prime minister of Qatar, bestowed the big bucks on the heir to the British throne in three deliveries during private, off-the-books meetings at Clarence House, the prince’s official London residence.

He came toting stacks of bills totaling 3 million euros — about $3.2 million at today’s exchange rates — in duffel bags, a suitcase, and several branded shopping bags from the famed Fortnum & Mason department store.

The payments were deposited into the Prince of Wales’s Charitable Fund (PWCF), a grant-making entity that quietly bankrolls the prince’s pet projects — and pays the bills at his Scottish country estate.

The charity “carried out the appropriate governance and assured us that all the correct processes were followed,” a Clarence House spokesman said.

But the revelation fueled talk of a “cash-for-access culture” surrounding Prince Charles — coming just months after his longtime aide, Michael Fawcett, was bounced from the charity amid allegations he used his position to help a Saudi billionaire receive a “golden visa” and high royal honors.

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UAE strongman Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed named new president

  • MbZ becomes president at a time of tension with U.S.
  • He led a Middle East realignment, forging ties with Israel
  • UAE has also deepened ties with Russia and China
  • Economic development a priority driving foreign policy

DUBAI, May 14 (Reuters) – The United Arab Emirates’ de facto leader Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan was elected president of the Gulf Arab state by a federal supreme council on Saturday, solidifying his rule over the OPEC oil producer and key regional player. read more

He becomes president at a time when the UAE’s long-standing ties with the United States have been strained over perceived U.S. disengagement from its Gulf allies’ security concerns and as Western countries seek support from the region to help isolate Russia over the Ukraine conflict.

The council, which groups the rulers of the seven emirates of the UAE federation, elected Sheikh Mohammed, known as MbZ, a day after the death of his half-brother, President Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed, who was also ruler of Abu Dhabi.

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“We congratulate him and pledge allegiance to him as do our people,” said Dubai ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, who is also UAE vice-president and premier.

MbZ, 61, has wielded power behind the scenes for years and led a realignment of the Middle East that created a new anti-Iran axis with Israel.

The UAE, a trade and tourism hub, has also deepened ties with Russia and China at a time when Washington’s political capital with Abu Dhabi and Riyadh has been eroded by differences over the Yemen war, Iran and U.S. conditions on arms sales.

“Mohammed bin Zayed has set not only the future course for the UAE but for much of the Gulf in his approach to state building and power projection,” said Kristin Diwan, senior resident scholar at Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington.

“The future direction under him is set and is mirrored in other Gulf leaders adopting state-led and globally-oriented economic diversification.”

‘EXTRAORDINARY FOUNDATION’

The Biden administration has moved to mend ties with oil heavyweights Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Both have refused to take sides in the Russia-Ukraine conflict and rebuffed Western calls to pump more oil to help tame crude prices. read more

President Joe Biden said in a statement on Saturday that he looked forward to working with Sheikh Mohammed “to build from this extraordinary foundation to further strengthen the bonds between our countries and peoples.”

Vice President Kamala Harris will head a U.S. delegation to the UAE on Monday to offer condolences following Khalifa’s death and will meet with MbZ, press secretary Kirsten Allen said.

French President Emmanuel Macron, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Israeli President Isaac Herzog are due to arrive on Sunday. read more S8N2S7032

MbZ as president would not lead the UAE to break with the United States or other Western partners though he will diversify the country’s international partners, Emirati political scientist Abulkhaleq Abdulla told Reuters.

MbZ has shifted away from a hawkish foreign policy and military adventurism, that saw the UAE wade into conflicts from Yemen to Libya, to focus on economic priorities. This has seen the UAE engage with foes Iran and Turkey after years of animosity, as well as Syria’s president.

“MbZ will need to take further steps to cement the UAE’s position as the region’s leading financial, logistics, and trading hub,” James Swanston of Capital Economics said in a note, referring to a push by Gulf states to diversify economies amid a global energy transition away from hydrocarbons.

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Reporting by Enas Alashray, Lisa Barrington, Saeed Azhar, Alexander Cornwell, Steve Holland and Ari Rabinovitch; Writing by Ghaida Ghantous; Editing by Kirsten Donovan and Christina Fincher

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Far-right MK faints in clash with cops after planning all-nighter in Sheikh Jarrah

Far-right Knesset member Itamar Ben Gvir fainted during a clash with police officers Sunday night, after vowing to stay in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah through the night.

Ben Gvir, a member of the far-right Religious Zionism party, set up a makeshift office — a table under an awning — following the firebombing of a Jewish home in the flashpoint neighborhood over the weekend.

“I planned on leaving and returning. But I won’t accept the police actions. I’m staying here tonight. They will learn,” Ben Gvir said, after police attempted to dismantle the makeshift office he opened on the scene earlier in the day, and as clashes in the area continued into the night.

Ben Gvir fainted during a scuffle with officers, a video showed. He was taken by medics to Hadassah Ein Kerem Medical Center.

Officials had reportedly approached Ben Gvir to reach a deal that would include him dismantling the office. Ben Gvir is said to be demanding that permanent security forces be stationed at the home of Tal Yushuvayev following the firebombing, and for additional security cameras to be deployed in the area, in return for him leaving.

Officers moved in to dismantle the makeshift office on Sunday evening. It was not fully taken down.

“The police have crossed every possible line tonight,” Ben Gvir tweeted before the scuffle in which he lost consciousness. “While our representatives sat down with the district commander to bring about permanent police security, dozens of police officers come, use severe violence against right-wing activists and me, and try to destroy the parliamentary office. We didn’t plan on it, but we’re going to stay and sleep here tonight.”

A video showed Ben Gvir fall onto the ground and apparently faint as he tried to shove his way past a group of policemen.

Violent clashes erupted in the area on Saturday between right-wing activists and Palestinians and continued throughout Sunday. An unnamed police official told Channel 12 that Ben Gvir had made a “substantial contribution” to the escalating violence.

Hamas meanwhile warned of a “severe” response should Israel continue its “assaults” in East Jerusalem, a spokesperson for the terror group said.

Police officers in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, February 13, 2022. (Israel Police)

“We call upon our people to support the people of Jerusalem by clashing with the occupation at friction points,” Mohammad Hamadeh told official Hamas television, possibly referring to West Bank locations where Palestinians frequently clash with Israeli troops.

A similar escalation at Sheikh Jarrah last May, similarly encouraged by Ben Gvir setting up such an “office” in the neighborhood, contributed to the escalation that sparked an 11-day war between Israel and Hamas and long days of violence between Arabs and Jews throughout the country.

The firebombing of Tal Yushuvayev’s home by unknown assailants on Friday is being investigated by the Shin Bet security agency as a potential terror attack, The Times of Israel has learned. The family was away from home at the time, but a police officer was lightly hurt from smoke inhalation.

Yushuvayev has said he replaced his vehicle at least nine times in recent months, after unknown assailants firebombed his cars.

“They attempted to murder me and my family,” Yushuvayev said after the attack on his home.

“The frustrating and ridiculous thing is that I have warned, spoken, shouted. Time after time they set fire to my cars, tried to burn my home, multiple times,” he said in a video circulated online.

Tal Yushuvayev speaks to the Kan public broadcaster after a firebomb was thrown at his car, January 9, 2022. (Video screenshot)

Clashes erupted after right-wing Jewish activists went to the area of the firebombing on Saturday. On Sunday morning, right-wing Jewish Israelis, including Ben Gvir, gathered in the front yard of a home occupied by the Salems, a Palestinian family.

The 11 residents are set to be evicted in March by the home’s new owner, far-right Jerusalem city council member Yonatan Yosef.

The Salem family arrived in Sheikh Jarrah as refugees from Qaluniya, near Jerusalem, following the 1948 war that saw the establishment of Israel, and moved into a home that had been owned by Jews before 1948. After Israel captured East Jerusalem in 1967, it passed legislation that allowed Israelis to reclaim property that had fallen into the hands of the Jordanians after 1948, which includes the Salem family home.

According to videos from the scene on Sunday, Israelis and Palestinians began shoving one another in an altercation that soon devolved into an all-out brawl.

The clashes continued sporadically throughout the day, as some Palestinian protesters chanted slogans in support of the Hamas terror group. Dozens of right-wing Jewish nationalists chanted “Death to Arabs” and “Death to terrorists,” as police fired stun grenades into the crowd of Palestinian demonstrators.

Amid the clashes, right-wing activists and Jerusalem city council member Aryeh King scuffled with Joint List MK Ahmed Tibi, who arrived along with party MKs Ofer Cassif and Osama Saadi to protest against Ben Gvir’s makeshift office.

The Palestinian Red Crescent said 31 Palestinians were wounded, and at least six were hospitalized following the clashes. One Jewish man was lightly hurt from a stun grenade that hit his knee, medics at the scene said.

Police deployed rubber bullets and stun grenades to disperse the crowds.

“In the past day, we have witnessed disinformation and misinformation circulating on social media in relation to various events in the area, along with violent and inflammatory online discourse, and unlawful attempts to ignite the area,” police said in a statement on Sunday evening.

“The Israel Police will continue to act with determination and with zero tolerance against violence of any kind, violation of public order and illegal attempts to harm police officers or civilians,” the statement added.

By evening, police said 12 suspects had been arrested for public disorder, as officers braced for more violence. The nationality of the suspects was not immediately clear.

Police disperse Jewish men protesting in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, February 13, 2022.(Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90)

Sheikh Jarrah, parts of which were historically known as Shimon Hatzadik or Nahalat Shimon, has become one of Jerusalem’s most tense neighborhoods. Far-right Jewish nationalists have sought to evict Palestinian residents in decades-long legal battles that helped touch off violence between Israel and Hamas last May. Scattered acts of violence have taken place in the area for months since then.

Tensions have been rising in the neighborhood for weeks. In January, municipal bulldozers evicted the Salhiya family in the dead of night following a standoff with police. The Jerusalem municipality expropriated the home to build a school on the plot where the Salhiyas lived.

Palestinian protesters gather in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, February 13, 2022. (Arie Leib Abrams/Flash90)

The Israeli Foreign Ministry describes the Sheikh Jarrah struggle in English as a simple real estate dispute. But both the Israelis and the Palestinians involved deem it part of a long-term battle to determine Jerusalem’s political future.

Israel annexed East Jerusalem in 1980 in a move not recognized by the international community. Palestinians hope to see the capital of their yet-unrealized state in East Jerusalem, an aspiration opposed by the Israeli right.

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Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid shares new image of Mars taken by Hope Probe

Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, has shared a new picture of Mars taken by the Hope Probe.

He said on Saturday that data Hope had gleaned showed larger-than-expected amounts of oxygen on the Red Planet.

The UAE has also begun sharing the data it obtained with scientific centres around the world.

The image was of the northern parts of Mars.

Hope’s mission is to study the upper and lower atmosphere of the planet. The Emirates Mars Mission team will reveal more findings in the coming weeks.

The orbiter has also sent back thousands of images that help the scientific community understand more about the Martian surface.

The Data includes a breakthrough finding that there is more oxygen in the Martian atmosphere than expected.

The image shared on Saturday shows the spring season in the northern part of the planet, with the Tharsis Montes region that hosts three large shield volcanoes clearly visible on the left.

After entering orbit on February 9, the probe started capturing scientific data on the levels of gases present in the planet’s upper atmosphere. The gases include hydrogen, oxygen and carbon monoxide.

The first set of data has been published online and is available for free download.

The latest findings show atomic oxygen and carbon monoxide are more abundant in the atmosphere than had been thought.

The data shows dramatic variations in the concentrations of both gases.

“These observations contain features that were completely unexpected and we believe will have far-reaching consequences for our existing models of the Martian atmosphere and our understanding of its behaviour,” said Hessa Al Matroushi, the lead scientist at the Emirates Mars Mission.

“We simply hadn’t anticipated structures of this magnitude and complexity.”

Existing data had shown that the planet’s atmosphere was extremely thin and was being stripped away, with oxygen and hydrogen escaping and making it impossible for life to exist.

Research collected by the Emirates Mars Mission will help to build a stronger model of the atmosphere of Mars and its interaction with solar radiation.

It may also help scientists to understand why and how Mars, which may have once supported ancient life, continues to lose its atmosphere.

The new observations also suggest unusual levels of atmospheric turbulence because of the high density of atomic oxygen.

“It was so unexpected that we initially thought the structures might be artefacts in the image, caused by contaminating light from longer wavelengths that the instrument is designed to reject,” said Justin Deighan, the deputy science lead of the mission.

“We had expected to observe a relatively uniform emission from oxygen at 130.4 nanometres across the planet and yet here we are, faced with unpredicted variations of 50 per cent or more in the brightness.

“The science team is currently refining their models to come up with a robust interpretation of these findings. It’s very exciting to be challenged this way. This is exactly the type of science the mission was designed to pursue.”

The data will help scientists to understand why and how Mars, which may have once supported ancient life, lost most of its atmosphere.

Three instruments on the spacecraft have made the collection of scientific data possible.

The ultraviolet spectrometer has been measuring particles that have been escaping from the planet, while the infrared spectrometer has been building images at different infrared wavelengths.

Hundreds of high-resolution images of the planet have been taken by the exploration imager, using specific filters to help scientists learn about things such as ice in the atmosphere, small water ice particles, ozone and dust storms.

Scientists with the Emirates Mars Mission team will share details on the latest findings during the International Astronautical Congress, taking place in Dubai from October 25 to October 29.

The UAE became the first Arab country to send a probe to Mars when Hope started orbiting the planet in February.

The mission is part of the UAE’s ambitious and expanding space programme which this week announced its intention to visit Venus and explore seven asteroids in the Asteroid Belt.

Updated: October 9th 2021, 12:19 PM

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UK high court finds Dubai’s Sheikh Mohammed hacked ex-wife’s phone using spyware

Andrew McFarlane, the UK’s most senior family court judge, said in his ruling on Wednesday that he found that through a network of servants and agents, Sheikh Mohammed had hacked the mobile phones of Princess Haya, her personal assistant, her solicitors Baroness Shackleton and Nicholas Manners, and two members of her personal security staff using “Pegasus” software licensed to Dubai and the UAE by an Israeli company.

The software used included the capacity to track the target’s locations, listen to their telephone calls, access their contacts lists, passwords, calendars, and photographs, and read messages received through apps, emails, and SMS.

McFarlane said in his ruling the “the findings represent a total abuse of trust, and indeed an abuse of power.”

“It is an abuse which has been compounded by the manner in which the father has contested these allegations and instructed his lawyers. Despite the weight of evidence, the fact of hacking was never conceded, nor was the fact that such hacking had been by Pegasus,” McFarlane said.

“At no stage has the father offered any sign of concern for the mother, who is caring for their children, on the basis that her phones have been hacked and her security infiltrated. Instead, he has marshalled a formidable forensic team to challenge the findings sought by the mother and to fight the case against her on every point,” he added.

The judgment was released Wednesday, following a year-long reporting restriction that was lifted by the Family Division of the UK High Court.

In a statement Wednesday, Sheikh Mohammed contested the judgment, saying it was based on “an incomplete picture.”

“I have always denied the allegations made against me and I continue to do so. These matters concern supposed operations of State security. As a Head of Government involved in private family proceedings, it was not appropriate for me to provide evidence on such sensitive matters either personally or via my advisers in a foreign court. Neither the Emirate of Dubai nor the UAE are party to these proceedings, and they did not participate in the hearing. The findings are therefore inevitably based on an incomplete picture,” his statement said.

“In addition, the findings were based on evidence that was not disclosed to me or my advisers. I therefore maintain that they were made in a manner which was unfair,” it continued.

Dubai is one of seven emirates that make up the United Arab Emirates.

Because Sheikh Mohammed is the ruler of Dubai and the Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE, his lawyers argued that the Foreign Act of State (FAS) Doctrine — which prohibits a court from inquiring into the legality of acts made by a foreign state — undermined the UK High court’s jurisdiction in this case.

In January, McFarlane and Justice Martin Chamberlain ruled that the FAS doctrine did not prevent the court from adjudicating Princess Haya’s claims.

The findings are part of a series of ongoing hearings in London involving Princess Haya, and follow a ruling delivered in March 2020, which concluded Sheikh Mohammed had previously organized the abduction of two of his daughters and forcibly returned them to Dubai, where he held them against their will.

The Sheikh has repeatedly denied all claims raised in the ongoing case.

Correction: An earlier version of this story misidentified the capital of the UAE. It is Abu Dhabi.

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Sheikh Mohammed ordered phones of ex-wife and lawyers to be hacked: UK court

  • Phones of Jordan’s Princess Haya and lawyers hacked-court ruling
  • Hacking involved the powerful NSO Pegasus software
  • Sheikh was prepared for his operatives to break law, judge says

LONDON, Oct 6 (Reuters) – Dubai’s ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum ordered the phones of his ex-wife and her lawyers to be hacked as part of a “sustained campaign of intimidation and threat” during the custody battle over their children, England’s High Court has ruled.

Mohammed used the sophisticated “Pegasus” software, developed by Israeli firm NSO for states to counter national security risks, to hack the phones of Princess Haya bint al-Hussein, half-sister of Jordan’s King Abdullah, and some of those closely connected to her, according to the rulings.

Those working for him also tried to buy a mansion next door to Haya’s estate near the British capital, intimidatory action the court ruled that left her feeling hunted, unsafe and like she “cannot breathe anymore”.

The latest rulings come 19 months after the court concluded that Mohammed had abducted two of his daughters, mistreated them and held them against their will.

“The findings represent a total abuse of trust, and indeed an abuse of power to a significant extent,” Judge Andrew McFarlane, President of the Family Division in England and Wales, said in his ruling.

The sheikh rejected the court’s conclusions, saying they were based on an incomplete picture.

“I have always denied the allegations made against me and I continue to do so,” he said in a statement.

“In addition, the findings were based on evidence that was not disclosed to me or my advisers. I therefore maintain that they were made in a manner which was unfair.”

Mohammed, 72, and Haya, 47, have been involved in a long, bitter and expensive custody battle since she fled to Britain with their two children, Jalila, 13, and Zayed, 9. She said she feared for her safety amid suspicions that she had had an affair with one of her British bodyguards.

Among those targeted by the hacking was Haya’s lawyer Fiona Shackleton, a member of Britain’s House of Lords who represented British heir-to-the-throne Prince Charles in his divorce from his late first wife Princess Diana.

The activity came to light in August last year after Shackleton was urgently tipped off by Cherie Blair, the wife of former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, that she and Haya had been hacked, the court was told.

Blair is also a prominent lawyer who worked as an external adviser for NSO.

At the same time a cyber expert from the University of Toronto’s internet watchdog Citizen Lab, which researches digital surveillance, also alerted Haya’s lawyers after tracking the hacking, the court heard.

Once the hacking was uncovered, NSO cancelled its contract with the UAE, Haya’s lawyers said. The Israeli firm said it could not immediately comment on the case, but said it took action if it received evidence of misuse of Pegasus.

Shackleton and Blair declined to comment.

Mohammed is regarded as the visionary force behind Dubai’s ascent into a global commercial hub. He has sought to burnish the Gulf city’s reputation on issues such as human rights and equality.

There is no indication that last year’s ruling caused any major damage to him personally or to the UAE. Last month Britain and the UAE announced a “new, ambitious Partnership for the Future” involving billions of dollars in trade and investment.

LONG, EXPENSIVE BATTLE

Reporting restrictions on McFarlane’s findings after a year of hearings were lifted on Wednesday.

“I do not feel that I can move freely forward as things stand now, while I am and feel hunted all the time, and I am forced to look over my shoulder at every moment of the day,” the British-educated princess said in one witness statement.

The legal costs of the case have run into millions of pounds, with the case involving some of Britain’s most prominent lawyers. The costs of one appeal alone was cited by the court as costing 2.5 million pounds.

The sheikh, who is vice president and prime minister of the United Arab Emirates, initially sought to have the children brought back to Dubai, but has since suffered repeated defeats in the English courts.

In a judgment released on Wednesday, McFarlane ruled that the children should live with their mother.

In a ruling published last March, the judge concluded that Mohammed had subjected Haya to a campaign of intimidation which made her fear for her life.

He concluded the sheikh had arranged for his daughter Shamsa, then aged 18, to be kidnapped in 2000 off the streets of Cambridge in central England and flown back to Dubai.

The judge also found it was proved that Mohammed had arranged for Shamsa’s younger sister Latifa to be snatched from a boat in international waters off India by Indian forces in 2018 and returned to the emirate.

While his findings do not amount to a determination of criminal guilt, they mean McFarlane is satisfied the allegations are proven on the balance of probabilities and that this may impact arrangements for contact with his children in the future.

“As the previous findings of fact establish, the father, who is the head of government of the UAE, is prepared to use the arm of the state to achieve what he regards as right,” he said.

“He has harassed and intimidated the mother both before her departure to England and since. He is prepared to countenance those acting on his behalf doing so unlawfully within the UK.”

FRIENDS WITH QUEEN

Haya’s lawyers told the court that the British Foreign Office had been made aware of the hacking allegations, and police had expressed a desire to interview Haya and her lawyers as victims. Reuters was unable to establish if this took place.

There was no immediate comment from the foreign ministry or the police.

It is not the first time the UAE’s cyber activities have come under scrutiny. Last month, three former U.S. intelligence operatives, who worked as UAE cyber spies, admitted to violating U.S. hacking laws to spy on human rights activists, journalists and rival governments.

During the London hearings, Mohammed’s high powered team of lawyers battled for months to prevent the court from considering the hacking allegations, by saying it did not have the jurisdiction and that he had immunity, and then by trying to persuade the judge that the sheikh was not responsible.

Saudi Arabia and Jordan were amongst a host of other countries that could have been behind it, his legal team said.

McFarlane dismissed those suggestions, saying the idea it could be Jordan was “so insubstantial as to be without consequence” and was critical of how the sheikh had instructed his lawyers to act on his behalf.

In his statement, Mohammed said it was not appropriate for him to appear in court himself and neither the UAE nor the emirate itself were party to the case and so could not participate.

Instead of showing any concern for the safety of the mother of his children, “he has marshalled a formidable forensic team to challenge the findings sought by the mother and to fight the case against her on every point,” McFarlane said.

He concluded, and the Court of Appeal agreed, that the sheikh had authorised the hacking of six phones which took place between July and August 2020 when a vulnerability in Apple’s iPhone systems was exploited.

Expert cyber analysis revealed that on one occasion 265 megabytes of data was uploaded from Haya’s phone, the equivalent of 24 hours of voice recording or 500 photos.

Exactly how much data and what information was taken from her and the other phones has not been determined.

Haya and Mohammed have been fixtures in British high society for decades and both are on friendly terms with members of the British royal family including Queen Elizabeth.

The sheikh, through the Godolphin stable which he founded, is a major player and investor in the British horse racing industry. His horse Adayar won this year’s famous Epsom Derby flat race.

McFarlane also extended the provisions of a previous non-molestation order, which banned the sheikh from buying any land or property near her estate in rural Berkshire, west of London, after his agents tried to buy an adjoining 30 million pound mansion which overlooked her home.

“It feels like the walls are closing in on me, that I cannot protect the children and that we are not safe anywhere,” Haya told McFarlane in a statement. “I feel like I cannot breathe anymore; it feels like being suffocated.”

Reporting by Michael Holden; Editing by Mike Collett-White

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Bennett won’t order Arab eviction from Sheikh Jarrah – gov’t source

The government does not plan to evict Arab residents in a property dispute in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of Jerusalem, in light of how heated the matter has become, a source close to Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said.

The High Court of Justice scheduled a hearing for Monday on the eviction of four Palestinian families from Sheikh Jarrah, the east Jerusalem neighborhood known in Hebrew as Shimon HaTzadik. Lower courts have upheld claims that the property is owned by the Nahalat Shimon Company, which seeks to develop the land for Jewish housing.

Even if the verdict allows for the eviction of the Palestinian residents, the court is unlikely to order the state to enact it or give a deadline to do so, the source close to Bennett said, and the government will take advantage of that in order to not fuel the flames of conflict in Jerusalem.

The story of Sheikh Jarrah’s residents has received international attention, and not evicting them will refute claims that the round of fighting between Israel and terrorist groups in Gaza in May began because of evictions in the Jerusalem neighborhood, the source added.

Israel has argued that Hamas, which shot a rocket into Jerusalem followed by thousands into other parts of Israel, took up the issue of Jerusalem and escalated its attacks on the Jewish state as part of a power struggle with the Palestinian Authority after the PA canceled a parliamentary election.

The source also differentiated between the Sheikh Jarrah case and the illegally-built Bedouin enclave of Khan al-Ahmar near Kfar Adumim in the West Bank, in that the government is not a party to the Sheikh Jarrah dispute. It is currently reviewing whether to continue the previous government’s postponement of the demolition of Khan al-Ahmar.

In previous hearings on the matter of Sheikh Jarrah, Nahalat Shimon was able to prove a chain of ownership for the property going back to Jewish families before the establishment of the State of Israel.

The four families whose homes are in question are part of a group of 28 who fled their homes in other parts of Israel during the 1948 War of Independence and came to east Jerusalem, which was in Jordanian hands after the war. Jordan gave them housing in Sheikh Jarrah, on land owned by Jews; in exchange, they gave up their refugee status.

They are barred by Israeli law from reclaiming their homes in places like western Jerusalem, Jaffa and Haifa. The Sheikh Jarrah land was originally owned by two Jewish organizations, but has now passed into the hands of Nahalat Shimon.



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