Business Day

Howls of protest: Britain mulls UAE bid for Daily Telegraph

- Muvija M

Britain’s government is weighing up whether to approve a UAE-led takeover of the Daily Telegraph amid howls of protest from politician­s, journalist­s and even a former spy chief that the deal risks press freedom.

Britain’s competitio­n and media regulators submitted reports on the takeover to the government on Monday. Media secretary Lucy Frazer will now decide whether the purchase of the Telegraph and its sister title, the Spectator magazine, should go ahead. The Abu Dhabibacke­d buyout of the paper, which voices opinions within the governing Conservati­ve Party, has provoked fears of foreign influence in news reporting, which opponents say could threaten Britain’s democracy.

The government, which for years has had an open approach to foreign takeovers, intervened in the deal led by investment group RedBird IMI and backed by UAE vice-president Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan, ordering an investigat­ion to assess its impact on freedom of expression and accuracy.

Frazer could block the deal outright or order a longer investigat­ion that could take months.

About 100 MPs wrote a letter to Frazer ahead of the deadline for the regulators’ reports

“The free press is a key pillar of our democracy. If major newspaper and media organisati­ons can be purchased by foreign government­s, the freedom of the press in the UK has the potential to be seriously undermined,” it said.

“This is a dangerous Rubicon we should not cross.”

Sheikh Mansour heads a number of UAE sovereign wealth funds which hold British assets and he owns Premier League soccer club Manchester City. There is no prohibitio­n on foreigners owning British newspapers. The Telegraph’s rival, The Times, has long been owned by Rupert Murdoch’s US company. But the prospect of a foreign government rather than an individual owning the 160-yearold title has alarmed MPs.

The two publicatio­ns are technicall­y still owned by the Barclay family after RedBird IMI, led by former CNN executive Jeff Zucker, helped pay back a £1.2bn debt to Lloyds Bank to end a long-running dispute.

Telegraph columnists have voiced opposition to the takeover. Spectator editor Fraser Nelson warned in February that the takeover would have big implicatio­ns for the trustworth­iness of news. “I do not think any democracy in the world has seen one of its newspapers sold to a foreign authoritar­ian government,” he said.

RedBird IMI, which plans to take control of the titles through a new English-registered company, has given repeated reassuranc­es it was “entirely committed to maintainin­g the existing editorial team” and that editorial independen­ce was “essential to protecting their reputation and credibilit­y”.

MEDIA SECRETARY LUCY FRAZER WILL DECIDE WHETHER THE PURCHASE OF TELEGRAPH AND SPECTATOR SHOULD GO AHEAD

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