The Guardian Australia

Watchdog investigat­es firm behind Prince Charles’s eco-village in Scotland

- Hannah Summers

A charity watchdog has confirmed it is investigat­ing transactio­ns by a property company which apparently bought homes on an Ayrshire estate from a subsidiary of the Prince’s Foundation.

The company, Havisham Properties, is being scrutinise­d over the purchase of 11 properties on the Knockroon developmen­t in Scotland – originally acquired as a piece of farmland by Prince Charles when he bought the nearby mansion, Dumfries House.

The homes, understood to have been bought between 2012 and 2017 for £1.7m, were originally planned as an eco-village intended to attract jobs and revitalise the former mining community.

A spokesman for the Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator said: “We can confirm that the work of Havisham Group and property transactio­ns relating to the Knockroon developmen­t in Ayrshire forms part of our overall investigat­ion, work on which is ongoing.”

It follows allegation­s published in theSunday Timesthat Prince Charles ennobled the businessma­n and owner of Havisham Properties, Lord Brownlow, after accepting millions of pounds in donations from him.

The Tory peer, who in 2013 was appointed as a trustee of the Prince’s Foundation, which manages Dumfries House, helped bail Prince Charles out of the failed eco-village project after just 31 out of 770 homes were built due to a lack of demand. It was reported the prince hoped the project would help pay off the £20m loan he took out to buy Dumfries House.

In 2018, after Brownlow, 58, allegedly completed his purchase of the unwanted properties and quit as a trustee, the prince awarded him a royal honour at Buckingham Palace.

The Tory peer, who came to prominence after funding the controvers­ial refurbishm­ent of Boris Johnson’s Downing Street flat, was made a Commander of the Victorian Order (CVO).

“Lord Brownlow was appointed CVO in 2018 in recognitio­n of his role of chair of the charity the Prince’s Foundation for Building Community,” a Prince’s Foundation spokeswoma­n told the newspaper.

It follows reports the Prince of Wales will no longer accept large cash donations for his charities after facing criticism over claims he personally received €3m in cash from a billionair­e Qatari sheikh. The money was reportedly handed over in a small suitcase, a holdall and Fortnum & Mason carrier bag.

The cash was passed to the Prince of Wales’s Charitable Fund from Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber al-Thani, who was the prime minister of Qatar between 2007 and 2013.

 ?? Photograph: Samir Hussein/WireImage, ?? Prince Charles has recently been at the centre of controvers­y over large cash donations to his charities.
Photograph: Samir Hussein/WireImage, Prince Charles has recently been at the centre of controvers­y over large cash donations to his charities.
 ?? Photograph: David Brownlow Charitable Foundation ?? David Brownlow came to prominence after funding the refurbishm­ent of Boris Johnson’s flat.
Photograph: David Brownlow Charitable Foundation David Brownlow came to prominence after funding the refurbishm­ent of Boris Johnson’s flat.

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