Saudi ownership of Newcastle called into question by court admission
The Premier League were given assurances at the time of the takeover that the Public Inverstment Fund was separate to the Saudi state
The Premier League are not commenting on an argument made by Public Investment Fund [PIF] in a US court that they are a âsovereign instrumentality of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabiaâ, a position that would appear to contradict the reasons given for approving the controversial takeover of Newcastle United in October 2021.
This is despite chief executive Richard Masters saying at the time that the Premier League had been given âlegally binding assurances that essentially the state will not be in charge of the clubâ and that if there was âevidence to the contrary, we can remove the consortium as owners of the clubâ.
The development comes as part of the legal battle between the PGA Tour and LIV Golf, another highly contentious PIF sports project. A federal magistrate judge had ordered the fund to turn over documents and ruled that its governor, Yasir Al-Rumayyan - who is also the chairman of Newcastle United - must sit for depositions by the PGA Tourâs lawyers. The court had rejected PIFâs claim of sovereign immunity and lack of jurisdiction.
In response, the fund filed an amicus brief asking for the order subjecting them to discovery to be set aside, arguing that it creates an âunprecedented exceptionâ and complying with it would require them to violate Saudi law.
The introduction reads: âThe Order is an extraordinary infringement on the sovereignty of a foreign state that is far from justified here. The Public Investment Fund (âPIF) and His Excellency Yasir Othman Al Rmayyan (âHEâ) are not ordinary parties subject to basic discovery relevance standards. They are a sovereign instrumentality of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and a sitting minister of the Saudi governmentâŠâ
This is directly relevant to the protracted process that led to the Public Investment taking over 80% of Newcastle United as part of a consortium.
In the initial attempts to purchase the club in the first half of 2020, âForm Fourâ of the Owners and Directorsâ Test was never filled in. Sources at the time said that since this would have been signed on behalf of the state, it would have brought questions on the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi and a host of other human rights abuses.
The absence of entries on this form ultimately meant the Premier League had no actual decision to make for so long.
âFundamental to the case was control,â a figure with knowledge of the proceedings said.

In that time, the Premier League offered arbitration to resolve the issue, which was declined. The consortium temporarily walked away.
This was only resolved when PIF filled in Form Four in the months before the October 2021 takeover, a development that was combined with âlegally binding assurancesâ that the absolute monarchy âwill not control Newcastle United Football Clubâ.
The Premier League were âcomfortableâ with the way the structures had been presented.
In November 2021, chief executive Masters did an interview with BBC Sport where he was asked how the Premier League would know if the consortium was following the orders of the countryâs Crown Prince.
âIn that instance, I donât think we would know. I donât think it is going to happen,â Masters said. âThere are legally binding assurances that essentially the state will not be in charge of the club.
âIf we find evidence to the contrary, we can remove the consortium as owners of the club. That is understood.â
The Premier League are not commenting on the developments.

Meanwhile, Peter Frankental, Amnesty International UKâs Economic Affairs Director, said it was the NGOâs view that: âIt was always stretching credulity to breaking point to imagine that the Saudi state wasnât directing the buyout of Newcastle United with the ultimate aim of using the club as a component in its wider sportswashing efforts.
âIn the 18 months since the Newcastle purchase, the human rights situation in Saudi Arabia has deteriorated markedly, with scores of executions after unfair trials, courts jailing peaceful critics, and the authorities continuing to block accountability for Jamal Khashoggiâs murder.
âThereâs an unmistakable irony in the sovereign wealth fund declaration emerging in a dispute about another arm of Saudi Arabiaâs growing sports empire, but the simple fact is that Saudi sportswashing is affecting numerous sports and governing bodies need to respond to it far more effectively.
âThe Premier League will surely need to re-examine the assurances made about the non-involvement of the Saudi authorities in the Newcastle deal, not least as thereâs still a Qatari bid for Manchester United currently on the table.â
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Comments


Bookmark popover
Removed from bookmarks