Daily Mail

How could this brilliant British student be locked up for life by a kangaroo court in just 5 minutes?

- Guy Adams

SHOULD Matthew Hedges really be one of MI6’s top secret agents, he has a funny way of showing it. Like most of his generation, the 31year-old Phd student chooses to chronicle his daily existence on the distinctly un-spy-friendly medium of social media, detailing academic and profession­al achievemen­ts on LinkedIn, while recording more personal milestones via Facebook.

His homepage on the latter site is dominated by a photograph of his country house wedding to daniela Tejada, a Colombian he met during their time as undergradu­ates at Exeter University, and married in January last year. Hedges was wearing a kilt, a buttonhole, and a contented smile. His bride boasted a bejewelled dress and hairband, and in the picture was leaning forward to deliver a dutiful peck on the cheek.

Over recent weeks, Tejada, an occasional­ly outspoken PR and marketing executive, has mounted a very public campaign for her husband’s release.

In common with most Western observers, she regards the notion that this outwardly normal – and demonstrab­ly unsecretiv­e – young man could be a real-life James Bond as patently absurd. If his current fate wasn’t so serious, she says, the whole idea of him working as a spook would be utterly laughable.

‘He wouldn’t make a good spy at all,’ Tejada told the Mail. ‘ He would be too conspicuou­s.’

Moreover, she says, her husband doesn’t even speak Arabic. That not only makes him an odd candidate to carry out intelligen­ce work in the United Arab Emirates, but also, tragically, means he’s ‘unable to communicat­e fully with the court-appointed lawyer’ who was supposed to represent his interests at yesterday’s bizarrely short court hearing.

Of course, the authoritie­s in the UAE see things differentl­y.

They regard those same social media profiles as part of a carefully constructe­d cover story. What’s more, they apparently also take any protestati­ons of his innocence by the British Government as yet more evidence of guilt.

To a degree, therefore, Hedges can’t win. But so it goes in a country which, despite its status as a tourist hub, is justifiabl­y regarded by the Emirates Centre for Human Rights, a leading pro-democracy pressure group, as a brutal dictatorsh­ip with ‘one of the most repressive government­s in the world’.

True to this form, the UAE hasn’t yet disclosed the specific evidence that led to Hedges being jailed for life in yesterday’s hearing. However senior figures in the regime have provided some clues.

HAMAD Saif Al Shamsi, the UAE’s attorney general, has reportedly said Hedges spent a fortnight-long trip to the country in late April ‘ attempting to secure confidenti­al informatio­n to potentiall­y pass to a foreign agency’.

Anwar Gargash, its foreign minister, meanwhile claims to have heard ‘unusual and embarrassi­ng revelation­s’ about the visit.

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

The paper claimed that during interrogat­ion Hedges admitted the charges of spying for the British government.

diplomatic rumblings date back to May 5, when Hedges was seized at dubai airport as he waited to board a plane home. His arrest was witnessed by his mother. Although she has not been formally named, she is believed to be a member of the ex-pat community called Vivienne.

Hedges, who was born in Croydon in 1987 (his father is not named on the birth certificat­e), spent a hefty portion of his childhood in dubai.

There, he attended a local outpost of Cranleigh, the Surrey public school which (along with Repton and Brighton College) may now be pondering the wisdom of opening lucrative educationa­l offshoots in this Middle Eastern dictatorsh­ip.

After studying at Exeter, where he gained not only a future wife but also an MA in internatio­nal relations – his thesis was on the UAE’s military spending post 9/11 – he returned to dubai to work as a researcher for a think-tank called INEGMA.

It researches the region’s ‘ military and strategic affairs’, and is regarded as having close links to the UAE’s military. In 2014, he was joined in the country by Tejada, who having completed her own studies, secured jobs with two PR firms: Grace and Garbo, and Four Communicat­ions.

Hedges then went back to the UK and began studying for his Phd at durham’s Hatfield College in September 2015, aged 28.

He worked out of the Al-Qasimi building, home to the school of government and internatio­nal affairs, which was named after dr Sheikh Sultan bin Mohammed AlQasimi, a former student who now rules over an UAE province, where he’s been accused of human rights abuses.

To finance the studies, Hedges helped compile reports on the Gulf region for three consultanc­y firms: Gulf State Analytics, Babylon Communicat­ions and Optimum Business Consultant­s.

Although he and Tejada’s marital home is in Exeter, he has largely spent term-time in a £105-a-week student accommodat­ion block, a fact that has only added to his wife’s grief: ‘It breaks my heart that we have been married for nearly two years and only been able to spend four months together,’ she has said.

Earlier this year, Hedges flew to the Middle East for a fortnight. Tejada says he intended to interview a number of experts who could inform his Phd studies on ‘Emirati security policies in the aftermath of the Arab Spring’.

At some point, this endeavour obviously raised suspicion. Following his arrest in dubai on May 5, he was flown to Abu dhabi and held in solitary confinemen­t.

His fate remained secret until October when Tejada tired of following Foreign Office advice not to

publicise the case. She gave a series of interviews claiming he was being held in inhumane conditions, with no access to reading material or any way of passing the time. An initial one shower a fortnight had been increased to one a week, and he had recently been given a mattress to sleep on, she revealed, but he was still suffering anxiety attacks and had suicidal thoughts.

‘His only mechanism to let go of nerves is self-induced vomiting,’ she said. ‘His rights are violated on a daily basis and I am shocked that more has not been done to get him out.’

DANIELA Tejada had, at that point, been allowed to meet her husband just once, with their contact restricted to weekly fiveminute telephone calls in which they were forbidden from discussing the case.

During that face-to-face encounter, she says: ‘ He was constantly shaking. He clearly did not expect to see me. He seemed to be very cautious about what he said and what he didn’t say, which leads me to think he might have been coerced into saying or not saying certain things.’ last month Hedges was released on bail, on condition that he wore an ankle tag, in order to prepare for yesterday’s trial.

Given Britain’s supposed links to the UAE, which is home to tens of thousands of ex-pats and attracts hundreds of thousands of our free-spending tourists each year, many analysts expected the case to be quietly abandoned. But it was not to be.

‘I have a lot of breakdowns. But when you love someone the way I love Matt, you pull strength from where you never thought you had it,’ Tejada has said. ‘every time I cry, and I crumble, I give myself ten minutes, wipe my tears off, and keep on going and fighting.’

As of yesterday, it is plain this fight now has a long way to run.

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 ??  ?? Together: Matthew Hedges and Daniela Tejada married in 2017. She has campaigned for his release
Together: Matthew Hedges and Daniela Tejada married in 2017. She has campaigned for his release
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