Author Topic: UK Court orders Saudi royal to pay bills  (Read 589 times)

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UK Court orders Saudi royal to pay bills
« on: November 17, 2007, 04:20:26 AM »
LONDON - The shopping list is lavish, including a BMW, a thermal night vision kit for a Hummer, ivory tusks and two karaoke machines.

A British court released details of the list and ordered Saudi Ambassador Prince Mohammed bin Nawaf to pay $6.3 million to reimburse a personal assistant for hundreds of items bought on the Saudi royal's behalf.

The ruling contains a 13-page list of items Walid El Hage said he purchased in 2004-2005 while working as a personal assistant to bin Nawaf, who was then serving as the Saudi ambassador to Italy. It came to light following reports this week in Britain's Guardian and Daily Telegraph newspapers.

The court case was filed in Britain because the prince became the Saudi ambassador to Britain and Ireland in 2006. In addition, El Hage is a British citizen, according to his lawyer, Ian Bloom.

"If you ignore this order your goods may be removed and sold, or other enforcement proceeding may be taken against you," the High Court said in its Oct. 29 ruling.

Bin Nawaf did not respond to the court claim, but issued a statement Friday saying El Hage's complaint "is a personal matter and not a government matter."

"We are currently in negotiations, and we expect the matter to be settled amicably very shortly," the statement said.

El Hage said in his complaint that he had served as a personal assistant to the ambassador and to his father, Prince Nawaf Al Saud, since 1979. Most of that time, the bills were paid, the complaint said.

But El Hage said the ambassador failed to pay him for the bills he submitted between Jan. 10, 2004, and July 21, 2005.

In addition to airline and hotel bills, the list includes dozens of designer watches, including by Cartier, Patek Philippe and Jaeger Le Coultres purchased for tens of thousands of dollars.

Other items included jewels, Persian rugs, cameras, swords and antique weapons, as well as a fully equipped Chevrolet Avalanche pickup truck.

One expense dating to spring 2004 is described as "girls: party night 5," and cost $5,115, the ruling said. It was not clear where the party took place.

Under British law, it is up to the court to decide if the ambassador is entitled to diplomatic immunity, the Foreign Office said. But the brief High Court decision did not address that issue.

Ambassador bin Nawaf is a nephew of King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia.

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