Dubai ruler's ex-wife gets custody of children after 'exorbitant'
domestic abuse
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[March 24, 2022]
By Michael Holden
LONDON (Reuters) - Dubai's ruler, Sheikh
Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, inflicted "exorbitant" domestic abuse
against his ex-wife, a senior British judge has concluded as he awarded
her sole responsibility for looking after their children.
The ruling caps the end of an extraordinary, bitter and hugely expensive
three-year custody battle at the High Court in London between Mohammed
and his former wife, Princess Haya bint al-Hussein, half-sister of
Jordan's King Abdullah.
With revelations of kidnappings, death threats, her affair with a
bodyguard, blackmail, spying, and sophisticated phone hacking set
against a background of mansions, expensive clothes, millions of dollars
of jewellery and race horses, the case has often read more like a
Hollywood film script. [L5N2VI2F7]
The London court has previously ruled the Dubai ruler had made Haya fear
for her life, had abducted and mistreated two of his daughters by
another marriage, and had ordered the phones of Haya and her lawyers,
one a British lawmaker, to be hacked using the state security software
"Pegasus".
It has also determined that Mohammed, the vice president and prime
minister of the United Arab Emirates, must provide a British record of
more than 554 million pounds ($730.50 million)for the children's
long-term security and maintenance.
'COERCIVE AND CONTROLLING'
In his final ruling against the Gulf royal, Andrew McFarlane, President
of the Family Division in England and Wales, said Mohammed had
"consistently displayed coercive and controlling behaviour" against
family members who defied his will.
"Although conducted on a scale which is entirely outside the ordinary
circumstances of cases heard in the Family Court in this jurisdiction,
the father’s behaviour towards the mother of his children is ‘domestic
abuse’," McFarlane said.
Haya alone should determine all matters relating to the education and
health of the couple's two children, Jalila, 14, and Zayed, 10, with
Mohammed merely kept informed, the judge concluded.
His relationship with the children will be limited to phone calls and
messages after the sheikh himself decided not to pursue direct contact
with them, McFarlane said.
The publication of his welfare decision on Thursday marks the conclusion
of the case which has cost well over 70 million pounds in lawyers' fees,
described by McFarlane as "truly enormous legal costs".
The judge said Mohammed, who runs the Godolphin horse-racing operation,
was a father who loved his two children, and that they in turn loved
him.
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Princess Haya bint Al Hussein, the wife of Dubai's Sheikh Mohammed
bin Rashid Al Maktoum, arrives at the High Court in London, Britain
February 26, 2020. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls/File Photo
But, he criticised the sheikh's
behaviour in the litigation which had taken a heavy toll on Haya,
and his refusal to even acknowledge his ex-wife's role in caring for
the children.
"His Highness’s behaviour towards the mother ... whether by threats,
poems, coordinating press reports, covertly arranging to purchase
property immediately overlooking hers, phone-hacking or in the
conduct of this litigation, has been abusive to a high, indeed
exorbitant, degree," McFarlane said.
"Despite the court’s findings, in no respect has His Highness
accepted that any of this behaviour has either taken place or that
he has had any part in orchestrating it."
There was no immediate comment from the London spokesman for the
sheikh, who himself has played no part in the court proceedings.
The saga between the royals began shortly after Haya fled to Britain
in April 2019, fearing for her safety following the discovery she
was having an affair with a bodyguard.
She was later blackmailed by four members of her security team while
the sheikh orchestrated a campaign of intimidation against her, and
then later hacked her phone and those of her lawyers, previous court
findings have shown.
"The circumstances in which the mother has been forced to provide
care for the children since their arrival in England are well
outside the ordinary," McFarlane said. "The need to avoid any chance
that the children may be abducted has meant that their lives are
most tightly confined."
However, despite the serious rulings made against Mohammed, they
have had little discernible effect on his international standing or
relations between Britain, Dubai and the UAE, which have if anything
become closer.
The oil-rich Gulf state pledged last September to invest 10 billion
pounds ($13.6 billion) in British clean energy, infrastructure,
technology and life sciences, and Prime Minister Boris Johnson on a
visit to Abu Dhabi last week described it as a key international
partner.
($1 = 0.7584 pounds)
(Reporting by Michael Holden; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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