The Daily Telegraph

‘Well-respected’ British journalist arrested in Dubai over wife’s death

- By Raf Sanchez MIDDLE EAST CORRESPOND­ENT

A 60-YEAR-OLD British newspaper editor told Dubai police that his wife had been killed by thieves who broke into their house before confessing that he accidental­ly killed her by throwing a hammer at her, the UAE government said yesterday.

Francis Matthew, the editor-at-large of the Gulf News newspaper, has been charged with murder after confessing to detectives that he killed his wife Jane, 62, during a row at their coastal Dubai house last week, authoritie­s said.

The death of Mrs Matthew and her husband’s arrest has shocked the large British expatriate community in the UAE, where the couple had lived for decades and were a fixture of Dubai’s social scene.

The UAE government said that Mr Matthew called police to their home in the affluent Jumeirah area on July 4. They arrived to find Mrs Matthew badly injured and her husband said she had been attacked by burglars.

“The examinatio­n revealed that the wife … died from a strong blow on her head with a solid object. The investigat­ion indicated that the husband was involved in the crime,” the government said in a statement.

Mr Matthew then “admitted to the police that he carried out the crime” and “also admitted to assaulting his wife by throwing a hammer at her but he said he did not mean to kill her”.

“The public prosecutor has charged the husband with deliberate murder in accordance with the federal penal code, and investigat­ions continue in this case,” the government said.

Mr and Mrs Matthew had been married since 1985 and have one son. They were due to return to the UK this week to see him graduate from university.

The pair had lived in Dubai for

‘The examinatio­n revealed that the wife … died from a strong blow on her head with a solid object’

almost 30 years and Mr Matthew remained well connected in the wealthy Gulf state.

A photograph posted on his Facebook on June 25 showed him shaking hands with Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-maktoum, the ruler of Dubai.

Friends and associates of Mr Matthew said they were astounded to hear that the editor was under arrest. “He is the biggest teddy bear I know,” said one family friend.

Mr Matthew studied Arabic and Islamic Studies at the University of Exeter. Before that he attended Winchester College, one of Britain’s leading public schools.

He worked at The Economist before becoming editor of the Gulf News in 1995. He ran the paper’s day to day operations until 2005 and then stepped back to do more writing but retained the title of editor-at-large.

Abdul Hamid Ahmad, the editor-inchief of the paper, said the newspaper was “shocked and saddened at this tragedy”. “[Mr Matthew] is a well-respected journalist, known for his keen insight into the Middle East.

“He was holding the position of editor-at-large at the time of the incident. Both Francis and Jane have played a very active role in the British expatriate community over the past 30 years.”

The UAE has the death penalty but it is used relatively rarely.

An Emirati woman was executed by firing squad in 2015 for stabbing an American teacher to death in an Abu Dhabi shopping mall.

The Foreign Office said: “We are in contact with the UAE authoritie­s following the detention of a British man.

“We are supporting the family of a British woman following her death in Dubai. We are in contact with the UAE police.”

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 ??  ?? Francis Matthew with Mohammed bin Rashid al-maktoumn and, right, with wife Jane
Francis Matthew with Mohammed bin Rashid al-maktoumn and, right, with wife Jane

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