Sunday Mail (UK)

SCOTLAND FOR SALE

Revealed How government tried to sell Edinburgh Airport to Qatar

- Mark Aitken Political Editor

Secret papers detail draft sales pitch for Alex Salmond’s trade mission to Gulf

Selling Scotland’s busiest airport to the rulers of Qatar was top of Alex Salmond’s agenda during a trade mission, secret papers reveal.

Briefing papers prepared by civil servants before the then first minister travelled to the Gulf in 2011 reveal touting Edinburgh Airport, then up for sale, was a priority.

The former first minister also tried to convince the oil-rich state, which has been attacked for its record on human rights, to invest bi l l ions of pounds in green energy projects.

Salmond insisted yes t erd ay tha t , despite the sale of the airport being near the top of a list of priorities included in the briefing papers, he did not mention it to Qatar’s leaders.

The papers for Salmond’s visit to Qata r, re lea sed under freedom of informatio­n laws, detail his pitch to Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, the country’s leader until 2013.

Details come days after Chinese media revealed Nicola Sturgeon signed a £10billion investment agreement with Beijing and critics accused SNP ministers of being too eager to deal with questionab­le regimes.

Salmond’s briefing notes say the purpose of the summit in the Gulf state was to “promote collaborat­ion between Scotland and Qatar in the low carbon sector, to highlight investment opportunit­ies within Scotland, to explore opportunit­ies for a direct air service between Scotland and Doha and to promote the opportunit­y to purchase Edinburgh Airport”.

It was for sale at the time because of antimonopo­ly rules that forced then- owners BAA to sell Edinburgh or Glasgow Airport.

Scotland’s links to Qatar have come under scrutiny since it won the chance to host the 2022 World Cup.

Hundreds of migrant workers have died in appalling working and living conditions af ter being recruited to bui ld the tournament’s roads, hotels and stadiums.

Yesterday, Labour’s Neil Findlay said: “Coming after the SNP signed a secret deal with a Chinese consort ium, these revelation­s bring up yet more questions of the deals the SNP are trying to do behind the backs of the people of Scotland.

“The SNP Government tried to hush up the fact Alex Salmond was trying to punt Edinburgh Airport five years ago and tried to suppress signing a deal potentiall­y worth billions with a Chinese consortium mere weeks ago.

“While he was touting Scottish assets, Alex Salmond barely seemed to mention human rights, while Nicola Sturgeon professed ignorance about allegation­s of corruption on the part of one of the companies involved in the China deal.

“The SNP need to be honest with the people of Scotland about the deals they are trying to cut.”

As first minister, Salmond faced criticism over his courting of tycoons such as Donald Trump and Rupert Murdoch, which he defended by claiming he was helping bring investment to Scotland.

Yesterday, he

insisted he did not discuss the airport’s sale with Sheikh Al Thani.

He said: “I never even discussed the issue of investing in Edinburgh Airport with the then emir. I knew that there was no shortage of both internatio­nal and domestic bidders for Edinburgh.

“Indeed, I’d already had meetings with some of the potential investors with a view to securing Scottish participat­ion in their consortia.

“That would not have been known to the civil servants who prepared the 90 page notes from a Foreign Office briefing.

“In the economic part of the meeting with the emir, I concentrat­ed on the value added of seeking Qatari investment for Scotland’s marine renewable industry, which was not successful, and also establishi­ng a direct air link with Scotland, which was successful.”

Global Infrastruc­ture Partners bought Edinburgh Airport in 2012.

It was revealed last week that Sturgeon penned a memorandum of understand­ing with SinoForton­e and China Railway No 3 Engineerin­g Group (CR3) on March 21.

The news only emerged in China’s media as the Beijing regime came under fire for dumping cheap steel on Europe while imposing huge tariffs on imports.

Sturgeon admitted she was not aware that CR3’s owners, China Railway Group, faced corruption allegation­s which led Norway’s oil fund to blacklist the firm.

She said vetting of partners would take place only after firm deals were struck.

But Sir Richard Heygate, who advised CR3 and signed the deal, said there were discussion­s about three projects – 5000 new homes in Falkirk, Edinburgh and Ayrshire, a biomass plant in Ayrshire and an unspecifie­d railway project – and that constructi­on could start within a year.

Sturgeon is facing questions about the involvemen­t of SNP donor, transport boss Brian Souter, who was quoted on SinoForton­e’s website praising the deal.

A Sunday Mail investigat­ion two years ago exposed horrific conditions suffered by workers on infrastruc­ture projects for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

We revealed how labourers were dying from heart attacks and heat exhaustion in temperatur­es topping 40C but they couldn’t leave the country without their employers’ permission. Qatari authoritie­s promised reform but two weeks ago an Amnesty report said workers building World Cup stadia were still caught in “a living nightmare”.

Last month, we revealed how internatio­nal developmen­t minister Humza Yousaf appealed to Qatar for £1.3billion to pay for motorways and hospitals but did not raise concerns about the slave conditions of migrant workers.

A Scottish Government spokesman said yesterday: “It is right for the Scottish Government to promote opportunit­ies for the investment required to support Scotland’s prosperity.

“The Scottish Government are firmly committed to acting as a good global citizen and stand against human rights abuses wherever they exist.”

 ??  ?? DISGUST Labour’s Neil Findlay
DISGUST Labour’s Neil Findlay
 ??  ?? NO DEAL Salmond insists he did not ask the Qatari emir about the airport during their meeting
NO DEAL Salmond insists he did not ask the Qatari emir about the airport during their meeting
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? QUESTIONS Then first minister Salmond is shown
around the Museum of Islamic Art in Doha, Qatar, in 2011. Right,
details from his briefing papers NO EXIT Workers in Qatar, above, and Edinburgh Airport, left. Below, Sturgeon celebrates China deal
QUESTIONS Then first minister Salmond is shown around the Museum of Islamic Art in Doha, Qatar, in 2011. Right, details from his briefing papers NO EXIT Workers in Qatar, above, and Edinburgh Airport, left. Below, Sturgeon celebrates China deal
 ??  ??

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