The National - News

Warnings over claims made by Detained in Dubai group

- DAMIEN McELROY Continued on page 6

A British activist who portrays himself as a solicitor on a website that campaigns for people involved in brushes with the law in the UAE does not have a certificat­e to practise law in the UK, the profession’s regulatory body told The National.

David Haigh, who last month announced an alliance with Qatar to create a “new associatio­n for victims of torture”, was found liable in 2015 of breach of trust in relation to a dispute over Dh21 million owned by GFH Capital, a financial company based in the Gulf.

Mr Haigh regularly makes

media appearance­s and organises protests on behalf of the Detained in Dubai campaign. It offers its services on the website detainedin­dubai.org, which names its leading figures as Mr Haigh, describing him as solicitor, the London businesswo­man Radha Stirling as founder and a third man, Shahid Bohsen, as consultant.

A press release also described him as a solicitor after a protest outside the UAE Embassy last month.

Yet the Solicitors Regulatory Authority requires solicitors to hold a practising certificat­e if “your involvemen­t in the firm or the work depends on your being a solicitor; you are held out explicitly or implicitly as a practising solicitor; you are employed explicitly or implicitly as a solicitor”.

A spokesman for the SRA said that only regulated and fully paid-up solicitors could perform certain legal activities. And even if they were performing other legal tasks, they should make explicit they are a non-practising solicitor.

“He has not got a practising certificat­e at this time and has not had one since 2014, which means he cannot act as a solicitor carrying out any of the six reserved legal activities,” the spokesman said.

“We know that he has spent time in prison because we gather informatio­n on the regulated community. When an applicatio­n is made we assess all admissible evidence, but obviously we cannot speculate what his intentions might be in the future.”

In a statement, Detained in Dubai said: “We are in full compliance with all legal requiremen­ts relevant to the provision of our services, as is Mr Haigh. This firm does not provide any reserved legal activities in the UK. Like any firm we will not discuss our charging structure, this is a matter for us and our clients.”

After queries to Mr Haigh by

The National, the website now states that he is not practising in his profile.

Detained in Dubai emails have offered potential clients services including “working” and “co-ordination” with their appointed legal teams as recently as this year.

“It is not all clear to their clients that this is in effect consultati­on. The documentat­ion offers their clients activities that look like legal work,” said one source with knowledge of the firm’s services. “They are charging, in some cases, thousands of pounds for services that are really about representi­ng their case with contacts and campaignin­g in the media.”

The National spoke to two clients of Detained in Dubai, one of whom paid a substantia­l fee for its services. The case involved a medical negligence dispute with the family of a Pakistani victim who suffered brain injuries seeking advice on how to resolve a claim for damages that reached stalemate in Dubai’s courts.

The family claimed to have paid out thousands of euros in advance to Detained in Dubai to help raise the profile of the case.

Payments were made in two instalment­s after a meeting in Spain. Since then, communicat­ion has broken down between the family and DiD.

Mrs Stirling registered the company, Detained in Dubai Ltd, with Britain’s Companies House on March 11. She had previously been the sole owner of a company, Detained in Dubai, that was registered with the same body in 2009 but compulsori­ly dissolved in March last year.

Mr Haigh and Mrs Stirling are both listed as directors of another British business, Stirling Haigh, which is described on its own website as “Dubai’s best criminal law advisory” – it was founded in January last year.

A third body, Du Justice, was establishe­d in last October at Britain’s Companies House by Mr Haigh and while Du Justice is a private company, it is limited by guarantee, typically an option when the founder wishes to run it as a charity. There is a donate button on its website.

The National has establishe­d there is no trace of Du Justice on the Charity Commission register, so its self-described role as a charity has not been confirmed. British charities enjoy a unique legal framework and are exempt from corporatio­n tax. The firm’s Articles of Associatio­n state: “The company’s name is Du Justice (and in this document it is called the “charity”).”

Mr Haigh and his partner work on cases of British holidaymak­ers and others who have been caught up in legal disputes in the UAE, particular­ly Dubai.

Mr Haigh was deported from the UAE and is pursuing an appeal against a court order freezing his global assets, according to media interviews.

Mr Haigh was held in Dubai until March 2016, during which time he set messages on Twitter that praised his treatment in custody. It was only after returning to Britain that he launched accusation­s of torture and mistreatme­nt while in prison.

“Meantime my thanks too to Dubai authoritie­s – courts, public prosecutio­n, police for their honour and profession­alism. This NOT their fault,” he wrote in 2014.

The dispute took place after Mr Haigh’s involvemen­t in a failed attempt to buy control of the English football club Leeds United.

The judgment shows the court heard that Mr Haigh used his position to approve payments of “false invoices”.

The court was then told that Mr Haigh authorised payment of these invoices into his own bank account and one in the name of Rafael Yotiama.

“The defendant has transferre­d such amounts while the defendant is the trustee on such amounts, which are payable to the victim company and he embezzled such amounts for himself,” the judge at the Court of First Instance stated.

“The defendant disposed of such amounts of money as if he is the owner and transferre­d such amounts of money to his personal accounts with a view at (sic) embezzling such amounts of money.”

Since returning to Britain, Mr Haigh has resumed his interest in politics as well as maintainin­g a steady stream of commentary on the Gulf via Twitter. On his Twitter site he uses the title councillor, having taken an unconteste­d seat on the Altarnun Parish Council, an entity on the lowest administra­tive rung in England.

It is not all clear to clients that this is in effect consultati­on. Activities are being offered that look like legal work

SOURCE

Describing Detained in Dubai

 ?? Getty ?? David Haigh watches a Leeds United game while he was an executive at the English club in 2014
Getty David Haigh watches a Leeds United game while he was an executive at the English club in 2014

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