Well done on the banner CP but with respect, tip of the iceberg.
Wait til they find out about “the eight emirate”….
The UK government has courted investments from the Gulf to help boost its economy, especially after Brexit. But will it come at a cost?
Post-Brexit, the British government has strongly encouraged investments from the Gulf to help sustain its economy.
However, critics warn that such financial exposure means London is less likely to criticise its Gulf partners.
“By giving Gulf countries the opportunity to invest in Britain despite their record on human rights, Britain becomes more dependent on these countries and less able to voice a critical opinion on their autocratic rule,” Madawi al Rasheed, a Saudi analyst at LSE, told Declassified.
Any concern for human rights appears to have taken a backseat to commercial interests instead.
Over the last five years, the UK has sold over £75 million ($103 million) worth of spyware, wiretaps, and telecom interception equipment to spy on dissidents, to over 17 countries including Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain.
Not to mention Whitehall also authorised £1.88 billion ($2.6 billion) worth of arms sales in 2020 to the Saudi-led coalition in war-torn Yemen.
https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/www....aise-questions-over-undue-influence-45908/amp
Any raising of awareness is welcome but in all honesty, the Saudis owning a football team is the least of our worries. And with post-brexit Britain becoming an increasingly toxic trading partner, investment in and trading with other toxic territories will only increase.
Wait til they find out about “the eight emirate”….
The UK government has courted investments from the Gulf to help boost its economy, especially after Brexit. But will it come at a cost?
Post-Brexit, the British government has strongly encouraged investments from the Gulf to help sustain its economy.
However, critics warn that such financial exposure means London is less likely to criticise its Gulf partners.
“By giving Gulf countries the opportunity to invest in Britain despite their record on human rights, Britain becomes more dependent on these countries and less able to voice a critical opinion on their autocratic rule,” Madawi al Rasheed, a Saudi analyst at LSE, told Declassified.
Any concern for human rights appears to have taken a backseat to commercial interests instead.
Over the last five years, the UK has sold over £75 million ($103 million) worth of spyware, wiretaps, and telecom interception equipment to spy on dissidents, to over 17 countries including Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain.
Not to mention Whitehall also authorised £1.88 billion ($2.6 billion) worth of arms sales in 2020 to the Saudi-led coalition in war-torn Yemen.
https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/www....aise-questions-over-undue-influence-45908/amp
Any raising of awareness is welcome but in all honesty, the Saudis owning a football team is the least of our worries. And with post-brexit Britain becoming an increasingly toxic trading partner, investment in and trading with other toxic territories will only increase.
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