The Sunday Telegraph

The Gulf royals caught between two worlds

The divorce, in London, of Princess Haya and the ruler of Dubai will lift the lid on a dynasty shrouded in secrecy, says Peter Stanford

-

Headlines have a way of coming back to haunt you. Two years ago, in an interview with the society magazine, Tatler, the glamorous Princess Haya bint al-Hussein, wife of the billionair­e Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the ruler of Dubai, was hailed as “changing the way women are perceived in the Middle East”.

Alongside a picture of the 45-year-old Jordanian-born princess relaxing with British royals – with our own Queen the only one wearing a headscarf – she spoke of how she “absolutely” supports equal rights for women, adding “if not a little more”.

Now, though, this poster-girl for a new generation in the Gulf ’s super-rich ruling families has fled Dubai, via Germany, and is about to embark on a High Court battle in London with her husband over custody of their two children, Jalila, 11, and Zayed, 7.

The princess is said to be claiming she is in fear for her life.

The saga throws a spotlight on the lives of this younger cohort of Gulf royals (Princess Haya is 23 years her husband’s junior), many of them regular visitors to London – if not part-residents here. They may have the financial resources to buy anything that takes their fancy – Princess Haya’s present “bolthole”, as it has been described, is an £85million mansion in the ultra-exclusive Kensington Palace Gardens, where neighbours include Saudi royals, Russian oligarchs, and Indian steel magnates – but they are trapped between traditiona­l expectatio­ns back home, and the pull of the freedoms that life in the West offers.

Sharpening that focus has been the death in London this week of 39-yearold Sheikh Khalid bin Sultan Al

Qasimi. In the UK, this graduate of Central St Martin’s Art School ran his own Soho-based fashion label, but back home he was being prepared as heir to his father, Sultan bin Muhammad Al-Qasimi, the Emir of Sharjah, Dubai’s more conservati­ve neighbour.

Khalid, as he preferred to be known in the fashion world, had only been propelled into this dynastic role in 1999 by the death of his older brother, at the age of 24, from a heroin overdose at a family property in Surrey. Details of

Khalid’s death are being investigat­ed, but his body is reported to have been found at a

“sex and drugs orgy” at his

Knightsbri­dge penthouse.

Princess Haya’s decision to flee Dubai and abandon her 15-year marriage is also being linked with the disappeara­nce from public life of her husband’s 33-year-old daughter, Princess Latifa. The ruler of Dubai has 23 children and six spouses; Princess Haya is sometimes referred to as his “junior wife”.

Last year, there was an internatio­nal storm when Princess Latifa (like her older sister Princess Shamsa before her) attempted to escape Dubai. As a high-profile BBC documentar­y chronicled, she was returned to her father when the yacht in which she was travelling was seized in the Indian Ocean.

Princess Haya had been fronting the Sheikh’s efforts to counter allegation­s that he had kidnapped and was now imprisonin­g Princess Latifa as punishment for wanting to escape the “gilded cage” of palace life. Through her connection­s – Princess Haya had been involved on the ground in humanitari­an relief projects in Haiti, Palestine and Liberia – she had invited Mary Robinson, the former Irish president and UN Commission­er for Human rights, to visit Princess Latifa in Dubai.

To accompany pictures released last December of her meeting with the runaway princess, Robinson said that Princess Latifa was “clearly troubled” and was now in the “loving care of her family”.

Some sources in Dubai, however, are now suggesting that Princess Haya subsequent­ly discovered her husband had been lying to her about the circumstan­ces of Princess Latifa’s return, and was so horrified by what she found out that it caused her to start laying plans for her own escape with her two children.

New rumours have also now emerged that allege the princess had enraged her husband by lavishing gifts on a former British army officer who was her bodyguard – though they have not been substantia­ted. Neither the Sheikh nor Princess Haya have responded to the slew of allegation­s being reported.

Mrs Robinson has offered no clarificat­ion, saying only this week that Princess Haya “still is my friend”. The Sheikh has been slightly more forthcomin­g, posting a poem on Instagram that accuses an unidentifi­ed woman of “treachery and betrayal”. “You no longer have a place with me,” it reads. “I do not care whether you live or die.”

For her part, Princess Haya has kept silent, but has appointed Baroness Shackleton of Belgravia, the British lawyer, to represent her in court. Baroness Shackleton has a reputation as “royal expert” after acting for both the Prince of Wales and the Duke of York in their divorce cases.

“In Dubai, the Sheikh and Princess Haya have always been presented as a close couple and seen together in public,” says writer and academic Jim Krane, who lived in the city state for many years and published Dubai: The Story

of the World’s Fastest City. “My office used to be in the same tower block as Princess Haya’s, and the story was that the Sheikh was so ‘modern’, he would come and pick her up from work, not that I ever witnessed it.”

The reality behind such hype for women in the Gulf ’s ruling families is very different, argues Krane. “In good times, Dubai manages better than others in the region to embrace both Western values and its own traditions, but there is an underlying conflict. And when that tension bubbles to the surface, as it is doing now, it is always tradition – autocratic, tribally based, rooted in Sharia law – that prevails.”

Princess Haya is an outsider in this world. She is the daughter of the staunchly proWestern King Hussein of Jordan – who died in 1999 – by his third wife, Queen Alia. Haya was just two when her mother was killed in a helicopter crash in 1977, and was raised in a much more open society than Dubai, by a father she has described as loving and always available; breakfasti­ng every day with his children, going away on weekend trips with them, and encouragin­g both boys and girls to aspire. Haya studied at Bryanston School and Oxford University.

Unlike the man she wed in 2004, Haya’s four-times-married father only had one wife at a time – including two Western women, British-born Antoinette Gardiner (Princess Muna, mother of the current king, Abdullah II of Jordan), and the American Lisa Najeeb Halaby (Queen Noor of Jordan). Life in Dubai after she married would have been very different from in Amman, the Jordanian capital.

“The Jordanian royals are regarded by their Gulf cousins as being the most liberal,” says a British former counsellor who worked for the ruling family for many years and does not want to be named. “When I first arrived I remember being told by one prince laughingly, ‘you won’t find anyone locked under the stairs in any of our houses’.”

But the Jordanians are also, he adds, poor, and so dynastic and political factors may have played a part in Princess Haya’s betrothal to the Sheikh – as well as their shared love of horses. Before her marriage, Princess Haya had been the first Arab woman to compete at Olympic level in showjumpin­g at the 2000 Sydney Games, while the Sheikh owns the stables and stud farm at Dalham Hall, near Newmarket.

In some ways, the life that Princess Haya has enjoyed since her marriage was part of Dubai’s corporate brand as the more open-minded, Western-friendly part of the Gulf. In contrast to Saudi Arabia, where the ban on women driving was only lifted last year, she holds an HGV licence, and has travelled the world as a UN Messenger of Peace.

Yet these freedoms have limits, which seems to have been the stumbling block for royal women like Princess Latifa. “For them,” writes the Saudi activist Hala al-Dosari, “it is unbearable. They have the means to live differentl­y, and a high level of exposure to women from other cultures.”

Rahaf Mohammed, the 18-year-old daughter of a prominent Saudi provincial governor, made internatio­nal headlines earlier this year when she barricaded herself in a Bangkok hotel room rather than allow herself to be returned home to conform with traditiona­l views of a woman’s role. Speaking in Canada, after she was granted asylum there, she explained: “I had money, but I didn’t have freedom… All I wanted was freedom and peace of mind.”

Princess Haya’s high profile was meant to eclipse any misgivings caused by the cases of Princess Latifa and Rahaf Mohammed. Now she is doing the opposite as she embarks on what will be one of the most expensive legal cases in history. She is still some way from achieving the ambition she set out in that Tatler interview – “to understand what life [is] like without the royal machine”.

Some sources are suggesting that the Princess discovered her husband had lied

She is considered an outsider in Dubai, as the daughter of a pro-Western King

 ??  ?? REINED IN The Sheikh and Princess Haya at Goodwood
REINED IN The Sheikh and Princess Haya at Goodwood
 ??  ?? UNLUCKY ESCAPE Princess Latifa with best friend Tina Jauhiainen
UNLUCKY ESCAPE Princess Latifa with best friend Tina Jauhiainen
 ??  ?? CROWNING GLORY The Queen and Princess Haya pictured in Windsor
CROWNING GLORY The Queen and Princess Haya pictured in Windsor
 ??  ?? UNHAPPY COUPLE With the ruler of Dubai at the World Cup
UNHAPPY COUPLE With the ruler of Dubai at the World Cup
 ??  ?? LOOK SMART Sheikh Khalid (second left) at a Qasimi fashion show
LOOK SMART Sheikh Khalid (second left) at a Qasimi fashion show
 ??  ?? CENTRE STAGE With Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall
CENTRE STAGE With Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall
 ??  ?? HELPING HAND Princess Latifa with Mary Robinson
HELPING HAND Princess Latifa with Mary Robinson

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom