UK PM denies helping Saudi crown prince over Newcastle bid

UK PM denies helping Saudi crown prince over Newcastle bid
Boris Johnson admitted to instructing a senior aide to look in to the bid but said he did not intervene.
2 min read
Reports allege Mohammed bin Salman asked Johnson to intervene [Getty]

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson denies intervening to try to help a Saudi bid for Newcastle football club, Downing Street said on Thursday, amid a widening Westminster scandal over corporate lobbying. 

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman sent private WhatsApp messages to Johnson in June last year demanding that the English Premier League "reconsider and correct its wrong conclusion" blocking the takeover, the Daily Mail reported.

Johnson's official spokesman refused to comment on "private conversations", but conceded that he did instruct senior aide Eddie Lister to look into the Newcastle bid by a Saudi state consortium.

"The prime minister asked Lord Lister to check on the progress of the talks as a potential major foreign investment in the UK," the spokesman told reporters.

"He didn't ask him to intervene. The prime minister didn't intervene. The government was not involved in any point in these takeover talks."

The thwarted takeover is currently subject to legal arbitration in London, after Newcastle owner Mike Ashley disputed the Premier League's conclusion that the consortium was effectively an arm of the Saudi state controlled by bin Salman.

The crown prince's reputation has been shredded by the gruesome murder in October 2018 of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, who was killed inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul. Bin Salman has denied any involvement.

Former prime minister David Cameron is ensnared in a broadening scandal over the collapse of finance company Greensill Capital, whose founder Lex Greensill was keen to build more business with the Saudis.

A photograph emerged this week of Cameron and Greensill enjoying a "desert camping trip" in Saudi Arabia in January 2020, during which they met bin Salman. 

Cameron, who became a paid advisor to Greensill Capital after leaving office in 2016, insists he raised human rights concerns with the Saudi de facto ruler.

Greensill's collapse last month has threatened thousands of jobs at companies that relied on its supply chain financing, including at the steel empire of Indian-British billionaire Sanjeev Gupta.

Johnson has launched an independent probe into Cameron's private lobbying of ministers prior to the collapse, and three committees in parliament have now opened their own investigations.

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