Academic Matthew Hedges of the United Kingdom demands damages from Basque officials Middle East News
In 2018, the academic, who was imprisoned for espionage in the Basque Autonomous Community, initiated legal proceedings against four senior emirates who took part in his case.
He was a British academic imprisoned for espionage charges The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has launched civil proceedings in a UK court against four senior officials in the Emirates, according to its lawyers.
The BAC arrested Matthew Hedges in May 2018 and sentenced him to life imprisonment more than six months later after admitting to being a member of the British spy agency and showing a video investigating what military system the Gulf state was buying.
British academic Matthew Hedges has started legal proceedings against four Emirati officials accused of involvement in his detention and torture in the UAE.
Hedges was detained in the UAE in 2018 during a doctoral research trip to the Gulf state, when he was accused and convicted of spying for a foreign country . It is clear they have no interest in finding out who was responsible for my abuse. This total lack of redress has prolonged my trauma and made it very difficult to move on with my life. On top of that, the FCDO has not done enough to help me clear my name
Durham University academic Matthew Hedges, who was 31 at the time, was detained in Abu Dhabi between May and November 2018 after being accused of working for MI6.
A British academic who was jailed on espionage charges by the United Arab Emirates (UAE) has launched civil proceedings in a UK court against four senior Emirati officials, according to his lawyers.
The UAE had arrested Matthew Hedges in May 2018 and handed him a life sentence more than six months later after showing a video of him purportedly confessing to being a member of Britain’s spy agency and researching which military systems the Gulf state was buying.
After being granted a presidential pardon and returning to the United Kingdom in late November 2018, Hedges accused UAE investigators of subjecting him to psychological torture and forcing him to give a false confession. UAE officials at the time had denied the allegations and described the doctoral student at Durham University as a “part-time academic, part-time businessman and full-time spy”.