The Daily Telegraph

Journalist reveals how she was ‘sacked’ over UAE stand

Editor warns she was made ‘a non-person’ after article that was critical of the Emirates’ royal family

- By Dominic Penna POLITICAL CORRESPOND­ENT

A JOURNALIST has revealed how she was sacked for criticisin­g the royal family of the United Arab Emirates as she warned that Telegraph journalist­s would not be able to speak freely if a planned takeover by the Gulf state went ahead.

Anna Somers Cocks, the co-founder of the Art Newspaper, urged the Government to block the takeover as she discussed how they made her a “non-person” in retaliatio­n for unfavourab­le coverage of the UAE.

Redbird IMI, which is 75 per cent funded by UAE vice-president Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed al-nahyan, is attempting to take over The Telegraph and its sister magazine The Spectator.

Lucy Frazer, the Culture Secretary, has ordered Ofcom to further investigat­e the attempted takeover amid concerns about editorial independen­ce, to which Redbird IMI says it is “entirely committed”.

Writing in this week’s Spectator, Ms Somers Cocks recalled being asked by Abu Dhabi in 2009 to create an Arab version of the Art Newspaper after France and the UAE agreed to create the Louvre Abu Dhabi museum.

A pilot edition was well received but Abu Dhabi “immediatel­y” cut off negotiatio­ns in 2009 after Ms Somers Cocks gave a televised interview in which she said the UAE having separate pavilions for Dubai and Abu Dhabi at the Venice Biennale risked confusing the public.

Talks resumed two years later, however, and by 2017 the Art Newspaper had produced a magazine to mark the inaugurati­on of the Louvre Abu Dhabi, containing interviews with French and Emirati figures behind its inception.

However, the entire project was dropped after Ms Somers Cocks printed articles in the London edition covering the poor working conditions of the South Asian labourers who built the museum alongside a review of a book revealing offsets from arms sales helped fund the project. Recalling the moment she learned of her departure, she wrote: “That was it. My hotel telephone rang early in the morning. ‘Your services are no longer required’, I was told. From then on, I was a non-person.”

She added that an “appalled” official arranged for her to meet with the director of the UAE’S culture and tourism department, who was unconvince­d by her claims she could not just publish “unalloyed praise” of the regime.

Ms Somers Cocks continued: “Given the Emirati royals reacted so drasticall­y to such minor criticism, what fate would befall journalist­s in papers they own who make far more potent points?

“My mistake was to think a free publicatio­n was ever possible under an absolutist government.”

Seventy-three MPS, including frontbench­ers from both major parties, are known to oppose the sale over concerns about press freedom. Prominent critics of the planned sale include Sir Iain Duncan Smith, a former Tory leader, and Alicia Kearns, the chairman of the Commons foreign affairs committee.

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