Daily Mail

WE'RE LIVING A NIGHTMARE

Wife’s agony as British student arrested in Dubai gets life for ‘spying’ He’s sentenced after 5-minute ‘kangaroo court’ Now Foreign Secretary vows retaliatio­n

- By Sam Greenhill Chief Reporter

THE distraught wife of a young academic jailed for life in the Gulf yesterday has told of their ‘living nightmare’.

As Jeremy Hunt promised retaliatio­n, Daniela tejada insisted her husband matthew Hedges was innocent and said she now feared for his safety.

the 31-year-old was convicted of being a spy in a secret ‘kangaroo court’ in Abu Dhabi that lasted just five minutes. Lacking even a lawyer, he was left shaking in the dock as the devastatin­g verdict was handed down in Arabic.

miss tejada, 27, said: ‘i am in complete shock and i don’t know what to do. matthew is innocent. i am very scared for him. i don’t know where they are taking him or what will happen now. Our nightmare has gotten even worse.’

immediatel­y after the hearing mr Hunt warned the United Arab emirates of ‘serious diplomatic consequenc­es’. the Foreign secretary later said: ‘i thought i had some understand­ing that this was going to be resolved in a satisfacto­ry way. that hasn’t happened.’

British options are believed to include ending military cooperatio­n with the Gulf state. UK universiti­es are preparing a boycott. mr Hunt met mohammed Bin Zayed, the emirati Crown Prince, last week and assured him that mr Hedges was not a spy. Whitehall

‘Devastatin­gly high price’ ‘Terrible period of detention’

sources have given the same assurance to the daily Mail.

The durham University student was arrested at dubai airport on May 5 at the end of a two-week research trip for his Phd thesis on the security strategies of Gulf states following the Arab Spring.

He was held in solitary confinemen­t for six months and forced to sign a confession written in Arabic during interrogat­ion.

This confession – together with his research notes – was enough for the court in Abu dhabi to pronounce him guilty yesterday of espionage on behalf of Britain.

Mr Hedges played no part in his five-minute ‘trial’ and had no lawyer present. In the House of Commons, Theresa May announced she was ‘deeply disappoint­ed and concerned’.

Mr Hunt said: ‘Today’s verdict is not what we expect from a friend and trusted partner of the United Kingdom and runs contrary to earlier assurances.

‘We see absolutely no evidence for the charges laid against him.

‘We will do all we can to get him home. I have repeatedly made clear that the handling of this case by the UAE authoritie­s will have repercussi­ons for the relationsh­ip between our two countries, which has to be built on trust.

‘I regret the fact that we have reached this position and I urge the UAE to reconsider.’

Mrs Tejada, a Colombian-born marketing and PR executive, said after the hearing, which she attended: ‘This has been the worst six months of my life, let alone for Matt who was shaking when he heard the verdict. The UAE authoritie­s should feel ashamed for such an obvious injustice.

‘The Foreign Office have made it clear to the UAE authoritie­s that Matthew is not a spy for them.

‘This whole case has been handled appallingl­y from the very beginning with no one taking Matthew’s case seriously.

‘The British Government must take a stand now for Matthew, one of their citizens. They say the UAE is an ally, but the overwhelmi­ngly arbitrary handling of Matt’s case indicates a scarily different reality, for which Matt and I are being made to pay a devastatin­gly high price.’

Last night Miss Tejada was flying back to the UK for her own safety, according to her MP Ben Bradshaw.

The Labour MP, whose constituen­cy covers Exeter University where the couple met as students, said: ‘It is unbelievab­le. I went to see the UAE ambassador and he said Matthew had made a mistake and been naïve, and that it would all be sorted out, so this has come as a complete shock.

‘The diplomatic strategy of the Foreign Office has failed. It is quite clear that the softly-softly behindthe-scenes talking to the Emiratis has not worked.

‘We have very close economic, military and educationa­l ties with the Emiratis, and we need to start using those to ensure my innocent constituen­t can come home.

‘When a British citizen is treated like this abroad, the full weight of the British Government needs to come down in support.’

Miss Tejada is due to meet Mr Hunt today.

Shadow Foreign Secretary Emily Thornberry said the situation was gravely worrying, adding: ‘The UAE are supposed to be allies.’

Crispin Blunt, chairman of the Commons foreign affairs committee, suggested Britain should end military cooperatio­n.

Staff at Birmingham University are due to vote today on an academic boycott of its £100million dubai campus, which opened in September. Hopes were high when a depressed Mr Hedges was released on bail two weeks ago with an electronic tag, and allowed to stay in dubai. His wife flew out to look after him and try to build up his poor health in the run-up to yesterday’s hearing.

Last night the country’s attorney general, dr Hamed Saif Al Shamsi, claimed Mr Hedges had ‘confessed to the court the charges against him ... and acknowledg­ed in detail the crimes he committed’.

He reportedly said Mr Hedges tried ‘to secure confidenti­al informatio­n to potentiall­y pass to a foreign agency’.

Gulf News, an English language paper loyal to the regime, said Mr Hedges was reported by an Emirati who thought he was ‘acting suspicious­ly, asking sensitive questions about some sensitive department­s, and seeking to gather classified informatio­n on the UAE’.

dr Al Shamsi conceded that an appeal would be allowed.

Radha Stirling, of the campaign group detained in dubai, called the hearing a ‘kangaroo court’ and said the verdict had sent shockwaves through the expat community.

Professor John Williams, who is Mr Hedges’ supervisor at durham University’s school of government and internatio­nal affairs, said: ‘We are desperatel­y worried about Matt’s welfare. He’s an innocent man who’s been subjected to a terrible period of detention.

‘The process of the trial has lacked any legitimacy or credibilit­y and his health is not good.’

More than 650 academics worldwide recently signed a letter declaring that ‘scholars can no longer regard the Emirates as a safe place for legitimate academic research’.

durham’s vice-chancellor Stuart Corbridge said the court’s judgement had been ‘delivered in the absence of anything resembling due process or a fair trial’.

Mr Hedges has described his Phd as ‘researchin­g the effects of the Arab Spring on the Gulf States’ adding: ‘The research specifical­ly examines the region’s evolving national security strategy.’

More than a million Britons visit the UAE every year, with dubai’s beaches a major attraction. Mr Hedges grew up partly in dubai with his mother and step-father and had jobs there before taking up his academic research.

The UAE’s authoritar­ian regime tolerates little public criticism of its monarchy or policies. Last year Mr Hedges co-authored an article in an academic journal on the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, a political movement the UAE regards as an enemy. But his wife said he fully understood the sensitivit­ies of the region and would not have done anything to offend his hosts.

It is thought the regime grew suspicious of him during his twoweek research trip when he was interviewi­ng sources for his thesis. While his lawyer says the informatio­n he gleaned was not controvers­ial, the Emiratis might not have seen it that way.

 ??  ?? Wedding day: Matthew Hedges with Daniela Tejada
Wedding day: Matthew Hedges with Daniela Tejada
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Hope: Jeremy Hunt tweeted about his meeting, above, b with ith the th Emirati E i ti crown prince i

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