Prince Andrew arouses concerns over trade missions

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Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Prince Andrew arouses concerns over ‘business as usual’ trade missions” was written by Robert Booth, for The Guardian on Monday 30th January 2012 20.35 UTC

The government has been urged to explain why Prince Andrew has met four foreign heads of state in the past six months and embarked on two full-scale government trade missions despite stepping down as the UK’s special representative for trade.

The Duke of York announced last July that he would relinquish the role following criticism of his association with a convicted child sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein, and business connections with dictators including Colonel Gaddafi.

But palace records reveal he has remained at the heart of the UK government’s export drive and has carried out 17 engagements in Saudi Arabia and China for UK Trade and Investment, an arm of the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills, since the announcement that he was no longer the special representative for trade.

On other trade trips endorsed by a cabinet committee, he had meetings with the emir of Qatar, the crown prince of Abu Dhabi, the prime minister of Malaysia and the presidents of Panama and Mongolia. In December, he met the king of Bahrain after the Bahrain Independent Commission of Inquiry published a report which, according to Human Rights Watch, “found a pattern of serious human rights violations that included the use of excessive force against peaceful protesters, arbitrary arrests and detentions, torture and ill-treatment of detainees”.

Bahrain’s state news agency said the meeting was to discuss “ways of promoting joint economic, trade and cultural cooperation”.

The extent of Andrew’s continued globetrotting emerged after he hosted a reception last week for UK trade delegates at the world economic forum in Davos, Switzerland. He also hosted a dinner for Indonesian businessmen and met Azerbaijan’s dictator, President Ilham Aliyev.

“The government needs to come clean about this,” said Labour MP Chris Bryant, the former Europe minister. “Last year, after a hail of criticism, they let it be known they were dispensing with the Duke of York’s services, but now it seems to be business as usual. There should be no secrecy about whether the British taxpayer is paying for the duke’s travel. If he is going to shake hands with the king of Bahrain, we need to know what is going on. People will continue to ask whose interests he is really representing.”

When Andrew stood down from the role of special representative, he said he was planning to focus on developing business and technology skills in the UK, particularly among small businesses, promoting opportunities arising from the London Olympics and encouraging young entrepreneurs.

“I have decided that the label I gave myself when I began this role of special representative has served its purpose and is no longer necessary to the work that I do today and, more importantly, in the future,” he said.

But he has retained high level access inside the coalition government and, in the past two months, has held private meetings with the foreign secretary, William Hague, the chancellor, George Osborne, and the international development secretary, Andrew Mitchell, as well as with Sir Jeremy Heywood, the new cabinet secretary, according to the court circular. He travelled with the trade minister Lord Green on an official trade mission to Saudi Arabia in September and they undertook several joint engagements, meeting Saudi leaders and businessmen.

One Whitehall official suggested Andrew’s continued role reflected the British government’s need for his influence in autocratic countries where leaders are not satisfied with contact with a changing roster of ministers.

“It is absolutely true that the duke has access at the highest levels which he uses to assist trade objectives and UK companies,” said a spokesman for UKTI.

“He is particularly valuable in some parts of the world where continuity is valued over continually changing personnel.”

In the past six months, he had meetings with 15 ministers from foreign governments in Qatar, Hong Kong and Saudi Arabia and took part in five dinners and lunches abroad in aid of British trade. Two weeks ago, he attended a reception for the Turkmenistan-UK Trade and Industry Council at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office.

His trade promotion activity has previously caused controversy. Shortly before the Arab spring, he invited Sakher el-Materi, a son-in-law of the now deposed Tunisian dictator, Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali, to lunch at Buckingham Palace. Materi, a businessman, has since fled Tunisia. Last year, Andrew lobbied an MP to help boost British business with Azerbaijan, an autocracy which has been accused of torturing protesters. He met Muammar Gaddafi in Tripoli on government trade business in November 2008 and lunched with his cabinet chief, Bashir Saleh, in London in July 2009 after giving a seminar at St James’s Palace for Gaddafi’s £5bn Libya Africa Investment Portfolio.

The UKTI and Buckingham Palace defended his continued trade role. “When the duke indicated he would give up the title of special representative, he made clear he saw promoting the UK in key markets as an important role,” said a UKTI spokesman. “Nobody else has been appointed to this role and as a senior member of the royal family he would be entitled to hold meetings with Nick Baird [chief executive of UKTI] or Jeremy Heywood. All his overseas visits are considered by the royal visits committee to ensure maximum benefit to the UK.”

A spokesman for the prince said: “As the prime minister said at the time of the announcement, HRH will continue to support and promote British business interests both at home and overseas. He will not have a specialist role as defined by government but will undertake trade engagements if requested. He has developed a particular interest in promoting skills and education for young people, and in apprenticeships and training. The duke continues to support business and investment in the UK and travels overseas in his capacity as a senior working member of the royal family, in exactly the same way as do others.”

He said travel costs for the trips were covered by royal travel grant-in-aid, which is funded by the Department for Transport. A previous charter flight from Farnborough to Jeddah and back on a trade mission to Saudi Arabia was billed to the taxpayer at £28,767.

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Prince Andrew to step down as envoy, Palace confirms

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Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Prince Andrew to step down as trade envoy, Buckingham Palace confirms” was written by Stephen Bates, for The Guardian on Friday 22nd July 2011 00.45 UTC

Prince Andrew has accepted a downgrading of his role as a trade envoy four months after coming under severe criticism for his association with a convicted US billionaire sex offender.

His days jetsetting around the world as a representative for British businesses – which earned him the tag “Airmiles Andy” – also look to be over as Buckingham Palace confirmed only that he would “continue to support business in the UK” and would not have a specialised role.

After a day in which the palace declined to confirm media reports that the prince, fourth in line to the throne, would be standing down, it issued a statement saying that he would “undertake trade engagements if requested”. It is thought that he may now focus on boosting business in Britain and acting as a figurehead in the government’s plans to increase the number of industrial apprenticeships and training for young people.

The announcement follows, after a decent interval, the intense pressure the prince and ministers came under in March following the revelation that he had maintained contact with the American billionaire Jeffrey Epstein, who was jailed in 2008 for soliciting a minor for prostitution, and that Epstein had given £15,000 to Andrew’s former wife Sarah Ferguson to reduce some of her debts. The prince acknowledged he had made a mistake after a photograph of him with Epstein in New York was published.

That incident was only the latest misjudgment in the prince’s 10-year career as an envoy. He was also criticised for his use of private jets and helicopters rather than scheduled flights for his engagements in Britain and around the world and for his close links with unsavoury foreign dictators and businessmen.

Last year’s Wikileaks disclosures featured an American ambassador criticising the prince’s boorish remarks to businessmen during a lunch in Kyrgyzstan, during which he attacked a British Serious Fraud Office investigation into corruption.

His regular trips to Kazakhstan and friendship with Timor Kulibayev, the president’s son-in-law, also aroused adverse comment, especially when Kulibayev purchased Sunninghill Park near Ascot, given by the Queen to Andrew and Ferguson following their marriage, for £15m, £3m more than the asking price.

Further doubts were raised about Andrew’s position in the wake of a Guardian report about him entertaining the son-in-law of the ousted Tunisian president, Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali, at Buckingham Palace.

Following the revelations in March, the prince was called in to Buckingham Palace for talks with his mother and government ministers were said to be sufficiently exasperated to cast around for a new job for him.

The former CBI leader and junior trade minister in the last Labour government, Lord Digby Jones claimed on Thursday night that the new job would be the next natural step and “very much the same”. He told the BBC that it would have “one big add-on, a bit less travel and a lot more working with apprenticeships and young people in Britain to get them skilled up to make stuff that the UK can sell around the world…let’s see what he can do to act, to create some profit, employ some people, pay some tax.”

Chris Bryant, the Labour MP who was briefly a Foreign Office minister in the last government, who called for the prince to be sacked in March, said: “If he is going I am delighted. It is not before time – and there are quite a lot of people in the Foreign Office who will be very pleased too, even if they cannot say so.”

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Phone hacking: James Hewitt & Koo Stark ‘to sue’

Note: This article is from the Guardian. I am not allowed to make any changes to the text, but I have been informed that the correct spelling of the name of Ms Stark’s barrister is Andrew Veen.


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Phone hacking: James Hewitt to sue News of the World” was written by James Robinson and Mark Sweney, for guardian.co.uk on Friday 13th May 2011 17.01 UTC

James Hewitt, the former army officer who became famous for his affair with Princess Diana, is poised to sue the News of the World for invasion of privacy.

He is the latest in a long line of celebrities and public figures to take legal action against the paper over phone hacking.

Hewitt will issue proceedings next week after the Metropolitan police showed him evidence that suggests he may have been targeted by Glenn Mulcaire, the private investigator who was jailed for hacking into mobile phone voicemail messages in 2007.

The paper’s owner News Group, part of Rupert Murdoch’s media empire, has since been sued by more than 20 celebrities in the high court, along with Mulcaire himself.

Hewitt’s lawyer Charlotte Harris of Mishcon de Reya, confirmed that Hewitt is poised to begin action against the paper: “He’s had his meeting with the police, we’re satisfied he has a strong case and we will be issuing legal proceedings next week,” she said.

Harris also represents Sky Andrew, a football agent who is also suing the paper.

Celebrity publicist Max Clifford claimed on Friday that Koo Stark, a former girlfriend of Prince Andrew, is also poised to sue a tabloid newspaper over phone hacking, although it is unclear which title he was referring to. When contacted by the Guardian, her lawyer Andrew Veer said he could not comment at this stage.

Clifford said his understanding was that the title was not part of the News International stable, which includes the Sun, the Times and Sunday Times.

“She approached me some time ago saying she is convinved her phone was tapped when she was with Prince Andrew,” he said. “She wanted her to put me in touch with lawyers and she has been taking legal advice. I won’t say who she thinks it was, but it wasn’t News International”.

Another high-profile litigant, actor Sienna Miller, accepted £100,000 compensation from News of the World on Friday after the paper accepted unconditional liability for all her phone-hacking claims.

The unexpected agreement came midway through her own high court battle with the paper.

Miller is the first celebrity to settle their claim since the tabloid admitted hacking the mobile phones of eight public figures last month, apologised and offered to pay damages and legal costs.

Hewitt was the subject of hundreds of tabloid stories long after Diana’s death in 1997. He sold his story to the News of the World in the mid-1990s in a deal that netted him £1m, according to some reports, but the amount he received was never confirmed.

In 2004, he was arrested after he was found to be in possession of cocaine in a London bar.

The Metropolitan police are in the process of alerting hundreds of people whose names and mobile phone details were found in notebooks belonging to Mulcaire as part of a fresh investigation into phone hacking which began at the start of the year. They were seized in a police raid on his home in 2006 along with other documents, including his phone records and address books.

That evidence forms the basis of the claims currently being pursued in the high court.

News International, News Group’s UK parent company, is trying to settle those cases before they go to trial. But a number of new cases or about to begin, with several other famous figures considering taking legal action.

They include Heather Mills, Sir Paul McCartney’s ex-wife, Manchester United and England footballer Wayne Rooney and his agent Paul Stretford.

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Duke of York at parade in Scotland

Prince Andrew, Royal Colonel of The Royal Highland Fusiliers, 2nd Battalion The Royal Regiment of Scotland, met children in Penicuik, Scotland during the homecoming parade for the battalion on May 4. (Photo © Ministry of Defence. Photo source: The British Monarchy)

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Prince Andrew’s daughter ‘was given necklace by Libyan businessman’


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Prince Andrew’s daughter ‘was given necklace by Libyan businessman’” was written by Stephen Bates, for The Guardian on Sunday 27th March 2011 15.43 UTC

Prince Andrew is under further pressure over his work as Britain’s special trade representative after it was alleged that a Libyan businessman gave his daughter Princess Beatrice a diamond necklace for her 21st birthday two years ago.

The businessman, Tarek Kaituni, who is now a US citizen, has convictions for possession of drugs – for which he served a prison sentence in 1998 – and attempting to smuggle a sub-machine gun into France.

He was a guest at Beatrice’s birthday party at a private villa near Marbella, during which he was photographed with the prince sitting at the same table. Kaituni’s former girlfriend Manel Hamrouni, who was pictured sitting next to the prince, claimed to the Sunday Times that the prince had lobbied for the businessman to be given a consultancy with the British water treatment company Biwater and paid commission for helping to secure business in Libya.

The prince’s spokesman denied that he had ever acted on Kaituni’s behalf, received personal gifts or solicited payments for him. He described Andrew and Kaituni as “certainly associates”.

Asked whether the princess had been given a diamond necklace, he replied: “We never comment on any gifts given to members of the royal family.”

The prince’s association with Kaituni is the latest to discomfort the royal family and ministers concerned about how he has used his role as a trade envoy over the last 10 years. Earlier this month revelations about his friendship with the US billionaire and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein caused Andrew to admit he had been unwise and government sources to suggest he might have to consider his position if more negative stories emerged.

When the Labour MP Chris Bryant attempted to raise the prince’s connection with Kaituni in the Commons three weeks ago he was censured by the Speaker, John Bercow, who told him that references to the royal family under parliamentary privilege should be “sparing and respectful”.

The value of the diamond necklace is the subject of differing estimates, with Hamrouni claiming it was worth nearly £20,000. A British jeweller related to the person who sold it said Kaituni had bought it for £4,000 and Kaituni himself told the paper he had chipped in with others to help buy it.

Biwater acknowledged that Kaituni had approached them in 2009 but said it had made no agreement with him, had not paid him anything and had severed connections in 2010.

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