Premier League urged to "look again at Newcastle owners after US court case"

atomicloonybin aka ALB

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The Premier League has been urged to re-examine assurances given by Newcastle’s Saudi owners that the Middle East state would not have control of the club after the filing of a new court document in the United States.

The document filed this week has raised fresh questions about the level of separation between the Saudi state and the Public Investment Fund (PIF), whose governor Yasir al-Rumayyan is the chairman of Newcastle.
A brief filed in a court case involving the PGA Tour and LIV Golf describes the PIF as “a sovereign instrumentality of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia” and Rumayyan as “a sitting minister of the Saudi government”.

The Premier League approved the PIF-led takeover of Newcastle in October 2021 after receiving “legally binding assurances” that the Saudi state would not have control of the club. Now the human rights group Amnesty International is calling on the league to ask new questions of Newcastle’s owners.

“It was always stretching credulity to breaking point to imagine that the Saudi state wasn’t directing the buyout of Newcastle with the ultimate aim of using the club as a component in its wider sportswashing efforts,” Peter Frankental, Amnesty UK’s economic affairs director, said.

“There’s an unmistakable irony in the sovereign wealth fund declaration emerging in a dispute about another arm of Saudi Arabia’s growing sports empire, but the simple fact is that Saudi sportswashing is affecting numerous sports and governing bodies need to respond to it far more effectively.

“The Premier League will surely need to re-examine the assurances made about the non-involvement of the Saudi authorities in the Newcastle deal, not least as there’s still a Qatari bid for Manchester United currently on the table.”

The PIF is chaired by the Saudi prime minister, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, with eight of the nine PIF board members listed on the fund’s website as being either a minister or a royal adviser. Rumayyan is the only exception, but now the court document describes him as a minister too.


Frankental added: “In the 18 months since the Newcastle purchase, the human rights situation in Saudi Arabia has deteriorated markedly, with scores of executions after unfair trials, courts jailing peaceful critics, and the authorities continuing to block accountability for Jamal Khashoggi’s murder.”
The Premier League has declined to comment. The league’s chief executive Richard Masters told the BBC in November 2021 that if his organisation found evidence there was state involvement in the running of the club “we can remove the consortium as owners of the club”.

The PIF has also declined to comment. It is understood to have given legal undertakings to the Premier League that there would be no state control over the club. The PIF is challenging an order to produce documents and testify in the LIV Golf case.

Sources linked to the Qatari businessman Sheikh Jassim bin Hamad al-Thani say he is bidding alone for Manchester United, with no assistance from the Qatari state, sovereign wealth funds or other individuals.


 
Wouldn't surprise me at all if the PL ended up reacting to a ruling from elsewhere that exposed their lack of due diligence.
Nothing against Newcastle personally, but the takeover always had a dodgy whiff about it. If it does turn out that the Saudi regime is behind them then it will irreparably damage Newcastle as a club both publicly and financially.
Surely it is the primary duty of the PL to protect the integrity of its member clubs above any financial benefit that a takeover would bring?
 
I don't think they'll do anything.

The money has changed hands and they're in charge.

What would the PL actually do other than say they'll carry out more checks in future cases?
 
I don't think they'll do anything.

The money has changed hands and they're in charge.

What would the PL actually do other than say they'll carry out more checks in future cases?
If the owners have breached legally binding assurances then perhaps a mechanism exists that would mean they had to relinquish control of the club?
 
I don’t get why they had such a big beef with Mike Ashley when he has Dennis Wise scouring the French league for bargains.. all that Ashley out and cockney mafia stuff.
They were doing really well Alan Pardew era.. then they were making out that they were rivals to Man Utd and needed to have an English international striker like Wayne Rooney.

I don’t get what has changed.. pretty sure they were 5th or something daft like that.

Saudi Arabia better than Cockney’s? Eddie Howe more Geordie than Alan Pardew?
 
I don’t get why they had such a big beef with Mike Ashley when he has Dennis Wise scouring the French league for bargains.. all that Ashley out and cockney mafia stuff.
They were doing really well Alan Pardew era.. then they were making out that they were rivals to Man Utd and needed to have an English international striker like Wayne Rooney.

I don’t get what has changed.. pretty sure they were 5th or something daft like that.

Saudi Arabia better than Cockney’s? Eddie Howe more Geordie than Alan Pardew?

They hated Ashley because they'd been spoilt by Shepherd and Hall during the Keegan era, when the club massively overspent to challenge Man Utd. So I guess they thought finishing in the top 4 would be the norm, but Ashley bought a club crippled with debt and gradually made it sustainable. The average skunk never understood that, they just yearned for the Keegan days to return, sod the stability of the club, just win us a f'ing trophy!!!! LOL. Hence why they hounded out manager after manger that couldn't deliver, and eventually Ashley, who never got any recognition for the financial stability he brought.

Now they've "got their club back". (Except its owned by Saudi Arabia). They'll eventually hound out the Saudi's too is they can't deliver due to FFP rules hamstringing them.
 
Wouldn't surprise me at all if the PL ended up reacting to a ruling from elsewhere that exposed their lack of due diligence.
Nothing against Newcastle personally, but the takeover always had a dodgy whiff about it. If it does turn out that the Saudi regime is behind them then it will irreparably damage Newcastle as a club both publicly and financially.
Surely it is the primary duty of the PL to protect the integrity of its member clubs above any financial benefit that a takeover would bring?
The phrase integrity and the premier league don’t really go together do they
 
Wouldn't surprise me at all if the PL ended up reacting to a ruling from elsewhere that exposed their lack of due diligence.
Nothing against Newcastle personally, but the takeover always had a dodgy whiff about it. If it does turn out that the Saudi regime is behind them then it will irreparably damage Newcastle as a club both publicly and financially.
Surely it is the primary duty of the PL to protect the integrity of its member clubs above any financial benefit that a takeover would bring?
It's been clear from day one that the Saudi regime are the owners, the basis for claiming otherwise was ludicrous
 
Is it not a FIFA or UEFA rule that doesn’t allow state aid/interference ? So could potentially be banned from European competition.. not an issue for them at moment one has got to say…

That said, PSG, Barca and Real Madrid have been fine with state aid
 
Is it not a FIFA or UEFA rule that doesn’t allow state aid/interference ? So could potentially be banned from European competition.. not an issue for them at moment one has got to say…

That said, PSG, Barca and Real Madrid have been fine with state aid
Yes good luck with that

 
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