The Scottish Mail on Sunday

CHARLES AIDE TOLD SAUDI DONOR: WE’LL HELP YOU GET KNIGHTHOOD

Prince’s favourite Michael Fawcett is forced to resign (again) hours after MoS uncovers damning letter

- By Kate Mansey and Jonathan Bucks

THE Prince of Wales’s closest aide dramatical­ly resigned last night after The Mail on Sunday exposed how he offered to help secure a knighthood and British citizenshi­p for a billionair­e Saudi donor to Charles’s charity.

Michael Fawcett stepped down as chief executive of The Prince’s Foundation after being confronted with a letter in which he said the Royal charity would be ‘happy and willing’ to use its influence to help businessma­n Mahfouz Marei Mubarak bin Mahfouz, who had given it hundreds of thousands of pounds.

The charity said that Mr Fawcett – arguably the Prince’s most trusted aide – had ‘offered to step down temporaril­y’ while its trustees investigat­e.

A former Palace official said the loss of Mr Fawcett was ‘an earthquake’ to the

future King. The ‘cash for favours’ scandal centres on how donations for Charles’s cherished scheme to renovate Dumfries House, a Palladian mansion in Ayrshire, were solicited and what may have been promised in return.

The bombshell letter, written by Mr Fawcett on August 18, 2017, to Busief Lamlum, an aide to Dr Bin Mahfouz, says: ‘In light of the ongoing and most recent generosity of His Excellency... I am happy to confirm to you, in confidence, that we are willing and happy to support and contribute to the applicatio­n for Citizenshi­p. I can further confirm that we are willing to make [an] applicatio­n to increase His Excellency’s honour from Honorary CBE to that of KBE in accordance with Her Majesty’s Honours Committee.’

The revelation comes a week after this newspaper published a leaked email in which society fixer Michael Wynne-Parker provided details of how dinner with Charles and an overnight stay at Dumfries House could be

‘In light of his generosity, we are willing to support his citizenshi­p’

secured in exchange for a six-figure donation paid through a bank account linked to Burke’s Peerage, a guide to the aristocrac­y.

With Charles facing the threat of the scandal wreaking serious harm to his reputation, the MoS can reveal that:

Former Minister Norman Baker, a respected author on royal finances, said the sale of honours was an offence and he would be contacting Metropolit­an Police Commission­er Cressida Dick and asking her to investigat­e;

The Prince’s Foundation, which is registered in Scotland, had alerted the Scottish Charity Regulator to its probe;

Mystery deepened about the whereabout­s of a £500,000 donation to The Prince’s Foundation by a Russian banker whose invitation to Dumfries House was revoked;

The charity went into business with a Latvian tycoon who was later convicted of money-laundering.

It was also claimed last night that Mr Fawcett worked with fixers to have an honorary OBE proposed to Dr Bin Mahfouz ‘upgraded’ to a CBE. In an email obtained by The Sunday Times, William Bortrick, the editor of Burke’s Peerage, wrote: ‘[Michael Fawcett] needs to keep to his side of the bargain and sort out the Hon OBE immediatel­y.’

The sheikh received the honorary CBE, for services to charity, from Prince Charles in a private Buckingham Palace ceremony in 2016.

In the damning letter to Mr Lamlum obtained by the MoS Mr Fawcett makes no effort to disguise that support for the knighthood and citizenshi­p applicatio­n depends on Dr Bin Mahfouz’s financial support.

Writing on headed notepaper in his then capacity as chief executive of the Dumfries House Trust, he said: ‘Both of these applicatio­ns will be made in response to the most recent and anticipate­d support [of] The Trust, and in connection with his ongoing commitment generally within the United Kingdom. I hope that this confirmati­on is sufficient in allowing us to go forward.’

A year later, Mr Fawcett’s responsibi­lities grew when he was put in charge of Charles’s entire charitable empire as the £95,000-a-year chief executive of the Foundation.

One of his main tasks was securing donations for Dumfries House, which Charles bought in 2007 and which he has spent many millions of pounds on renovating.

Responding to our revelation­s, Douglas Connell, chairman of The Prince’s Foundation, said last night: ‘Earlier today, Michael Fawcett offered to step down temporaril­y from active duties as chief executive of The Prince’s Foundation while the trustees’ investigat­ion is ongoing. The Prince’s Foundation has accepted this offer. Michael fully supports the ongoing investigat­ion and has confirmed that he will assist in every way.’ Emily

Cherringto­n, the Foundation’s chief operating officer, will assume Mr Fawcett’s responsibi­lities while the probe is carried out.

Last night, a spokesman for Dr Bin Mahfouz said he had ‘not had personal or direct communicat­ion to either request, influence or make any arrangemen­ts regarding citizenshi­p or knighthood with Mr Fawcett, or anyone connected to HRH The Prince of Wales or The Prince’s Foundation’.

Insisting that Dr Bin Mahfouz had not expected any reward for his charitable donations, the spokesman added: ‘His Excellency had expressed an interest in applying for citizenshi­p but in the end decided not to pursue that further.’

Dr Bin Mahfouz has made several six-figure donations to Charles’s charities and in October 2014 was invited to Dumfries House for the unveiling of a fountain named in his honour. Mr Wynne-Parker, then a Trustee of the Mahfouz Foundation, was photograph­ed at the event shaking hands with Prince Charles. Mr Bortrick is seen smiling in the background a few feet away.

The departure of Mr Fawcett – who wielded power greater than most courtiers and was dubbed ‘Rasputin’ by some colleagues – will send shockwaves through Charles’s household. Mr Fawcett has twice been forced to resign in the past, but each time has been reinstated to a position of influence.

A former Royal aide said he was surprised by Charles’s continued reliance on such a controvers­ial figure. ‘Michael brings the money in and gets results, so the Prince feels he needs him around, but I never liked him. More importantl­y, Michael is a serious risk as far as the Prince’s reputation is concerned.’

Another source said that there had been ‘a reluctant acceptance’ that Charles would need to ‘dine with the Bond villains’ – wealthy and often colourful foreign investors – to bring in major donations required to keep his ambitious charity projects afloat.

The ethics committee of the Prince’s Foundation is already probing Mr Wynne-Parker’s email in which he set out how wealthy donors could pay £100,000 to secure a lavish dinner with the Prince of Wales and an overnight stay at Dumfries House. It said fixers would pocket up to 25 per cent of the fees, an arrangemen­t the Prince insists he was unaware of. The email said ‘clients’ would assemble for pre-dinner drinks before ‘HRH appears and greets each guest individual­ly with conversati­on and photograph­er’.

Charles ‘has to dine with Bond villains’ for funds

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