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Abraaj founder Naqvi faces UAE court ruling over bounced cheque

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A public prosecutor in the UAE has accepted a criminal complaint against Abraaj Group’s founder Arif Naqvi for issuing a cheque without sufficient funds, in another blow to the embattled Dubai private equity firm.

A judge in Sharjah is scheduled tomorrow to rule on whether Mr Naqvi, who is in the UK but a Dubai resident, and his colleague Muhammad Lakhani issued the cheque without the necessary funds, according to a prosecutio­n clerk and copies of court documents. The value of the claim is Dh177 million, the

Financial Times cited a court clerk as saying. In a statement to The National, an Abraaj spokeswoma­n said: “Members of the media have inquired on a hearing and potential judgment to be issued in absentia on Thursday, 28 June, 2018 against Arif Naqvi.

“Abraaj can confirm that a loan was granted and security provided in a pure commercial transactio­n. Partial repayment of the loan has been made and settlement discussion­s are ongoing with the intent to arrive at a satisfacto­ry solution for all parties. It should be noted that the cheques were provided as part of a security package and as such should not have been submitted to a criminal court. “Mr Naqvi is being represente­d in this matter by Habib Al Mulla, executive chairman, Baker McKenzie Habib Al Mulla,” she said.

Abraaj said last week it agreed to sell a big chunk of its fund business to US investment management company Colony Capital as a Cayman Islands court oversees the implementa­tion of a restructur­ing plan for $1 billion (Dh3.67bn) in debts.

“We believe deliberate efforts are being taken to destabilis­e the positive developmen­ts that the group and its joint provisiona­l liquidator­s have been working very hard to secure.

“Members of the media have also referred to the Auctus Fund. To Abraaj’s knowledge, Auctus is now the assignee of the said loan. In the view of our legal counsel, this raises questions of unjust enrichment and the overall basis and merits of the lawsuit,” the spokeswoma­n said.

Auctus, a debt fund, now holds a $100m loan made to Abraaj by Hamid Jafar, founder of Sharjah’s Crescent Group. Auctus has said it is unrelated to the Jafar family, the FT reported.

The hearing is a further twist in the unravellin­g of Abraaj, which says it has returned $6.5bn to investors over 16 years, but has been reeling for months over investor complaints that it mishandled their funds.

The bounced cheque was used as partial security for loans estimated at $300m made to Abraaj by Mr Jafar. Though, Mr Al Mulla has denied the allegation­s, FT reported.

In a statement, Essam Tamimi, who is representi­ng Mr Jafar, said: “The issue is now a matter for the public prosecutor – the accused has signed cheques and it is now clear he had no intention of honouring and is refusing to appear to face these criminal charges in the UAE ... The criminal complaint was submitted on behalf of the beneficiar­y of the bounced cheque in accordance with the relevant judicial procedures. The cheques were not a guarantee and were part of documentat­ion which confirms the accused’s liability to repay the debt on the due date of the cheques.

“As a matter of UAE Law cheques by definition are due on the date the cheque bears. I can also confirm there are no ongoing negotiatio­ns to resolve this matter.”

 ?? Sarah Dea / The National ?? Arif Naqvi faces a criminal complaint hearing in absentia in Sharjah tomorrow
Sarah Dea / The National Arif Naqvi faces a criminal complaint hearing in absentia in Sharjah tomorrow

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