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Damac Dubai – UK TV news investigation

Posted by 7starsdubai on 2009/07/29

Dubai – 29. July 2009

In a report broadcast Monday night in the UK, Channel 4 News spoke to unhappy British investors with property developer Damac who have yet to see a return on their money in the Dubai market.

While some wanted quick returns, others simply wanted an apartment in the sun – not least David Hunter of Oxfordshire who said he had handed over £60,000, so far, for an apartment at Damac’s Lotus development.

Hunter said a Damac representative told him at the time (February 2007) of purchase that construction on the development had already started.

Three months later Hunter found out otherwise when it emerged that the plot was occupied by a UNICEF building. Hunter not surprisingly said he ’should have been told’.

Citing documents, Channel 4 claimed Damac had been selling developments off-plan without having title to the land in the first place – a practice outlawed by the Dubai Government last August.

Another document, dated from ‘late last year’ alleged that almost one quarter of the firm’s projects had been put on hold.

Meanwhile, a Harrow NW London resident who bought off-plan in the Flamingo Heights development 18 months ago, told the broadcaster he had paid three instalments totalling £70,000.

”I asked them in writing what the current state (of the development) was before I made my investment. I was assured that the foundations had been laid and construction was well under way at the site.”

With the Flamingo Heights development showing no evidence of construction when Channel 4 recently visited it Ludmila Yamalova of Al Sayyah Legal Consultants – to whom Channel 4 took the investor’s complaint – said he may have a case as a statement claiming foundations that had been laid when in fact they hadn’t, could amount to misrepresentation.

Erik Pekarski, former VP Customer Relations at Damac said the line being put out to customers was that ‘progress is ongoing, development is ongoing and construction is ongoing’.

Customers would continue to scream and yell at you as they should, because they had been put off for months, he added.

Damac has, in some cases, since offered alternative flats either complete, or near completion. However, many investors Channel 4 spoke to said they wanted their money back but, like the Harrow investor, had been informed by Damac that there is a ‘no refund’ policy.

When asked about the ‘no refund’ policy an unnamed former manager at Damac said the company took a tough line. David Hunter meanwhile says he has hired a lawyer.

In a statement to Channel 4 News the company confirmed it didn’t have a refund policy, except within ‘the provisions of the regulatory framework’.

It also denied any allegations of wrongdoing and said investors interviewed by the broadcaster were ‘not a representative group’. The company added that it had no intention or policy to mislead customers.

Addressing the allegation that the company had claimed foundations had been laid at the Flamingo Heights development when in fact they hadn’t Damac said: ”It is possible to have a rogue element who communicated information which was inaccurate and not endorsed.”

It added that the Flamingo Heights project tender is due to go out shortly.

source of this report Arabian Business

Posted in Damac Dubai, Dubai, Dubai Properties, Immobilen Probleme Dubai, Property scandal Dubai | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

Sheikh Maktoum Hasher Maktoum Al Maktoum – Iranian’s lawsuit reveals royals’ power in UAE

Posted by 7starsdubai on 2009/07/22

source WoMy BlogsrldTribune 09 June 2009

A  member of the royal family (Sheikh Maktoum Hasher Maktoum Al Maktoum)  in the United Arab Emirates has for the first time been sued by an Iranian executive on charges of fraud.

Shahram Abdullah Zadeh has sued the brother-in-law ( Sheikh Hasher Maktoum Al Maktoum) of the emir of Dubai ( Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum) in an unprecedented civil action in the UAE. The 37-year-old Iranian national has accused the brother-in-law, Hasher Maktoum Bin Juma’a Al Maktoum, of trying to take over Zadeh’s real estate firm.

“He thought he could do it all because he’s a sheik,” Zadeh said

Shahram Abdullah Zadeh CEO Al Fajer Properties 2008

Shahram Abdullah Zadeh CEO Al Fajer Properties 2008

The suit has challenged the transparency of the justice system of Dubai, which requires foreign investors to take on a UAE partner. Zadeh said he reverted to a civil action when prosecutors refused to file criminal charges against Hasher.

Zadeh, a life-long resident of Dubai, said he selected Hasher as the required UAE partner in Al Fajer Properties, established in 2004 and now worth $2 billion. Zadeh said he and Hasher fell into a dispute amid delays in building a billion-dollar office tower.

The economic downturn in the UAE has harmed a range of partnerships with foreign investors. In Dubai, the commercial capital, police have detained nearly 20 executives on suspicion of fraud. None of the detainees was connected to the ruling Al Maktoum family.

“There is no room for corruption and the corrupt,” Dubai ruler Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum said. “In all corruption cases, people are not only prosecuted and punished, administrative and legal holes that they exploited to commit their crimes are plugged.No one in the emirates is above the law and accountability.”

Zadeh said Hasher Maktoum Al Maktoum, who ignored two summonses, exploited his connections to the ruling family to have the Iranian arrested. In February 2008, Zadeh was imprisoned for 60 days and pressed to renounce links to Al Fajer.

As Zadeh languished in prison, Hasher Maktoum Al Maktoum was said to have taken over Al Fajer and appointed his son chief executive officer. By the time, he was released, Zadeh found that his office safe was ransacked and cleansed of any documents that linked him to the company.

At one point, Zadeh appealed to Dubai’s emir. He said the emir did not respond to the complaint against his brother-in-law.

“We understand that Al Fajer Properties is controlled by a powerful member of Dubai’s ruling family,” Moses Oye, who represents investors in another Al Fajer project, said.

Still, Al Fajer continues to operate. On April 15, Al Fajer and the Dubai Real Estate Regulatory Agency, RERA Dubai,  announced the first transfer of property using a new official online system.

Sheikh Maktoum Hasher Maktoum Al Fajer Properties

Photo: Sheikh Maktoum Hasher Maktoum facing lawsuits from Investors of Ebony and Ivory Towers - also named Jumeirah Business Centre) developer in Dubai is Al Fajer Properties

Hasher’s son, Maktoum, was identified as president of Al Fajer.  Zadeh was not mentioned.

Foreign investors have demanded an investigation of another Al Fajer project, Ebony Ivory.

The investors, alleging fraud, have called on the Dubai Real Estate Regulatory Agency to force Al Fajer to issue a refund.

“We have paid approximately $140 million and have a signed contract from Sheikk Maktoum Hasher  Maktoum Al Maktoum,” Oye, who represents investors from Britain, Canada, India, Iran, Pakistan and the United States, said. “Now, we want our money back.”

Posted in AFP Al Fajer Properties, Al Fajer, Dubai, Dynasty Zarooni, Ebony Ivory Tower Jumeirah Lake Towers, Jumeirah Business Centre Al Fajer, Property scandal Dubai, Royal Family Dubai, Sheikh Hasher Maktoum, Sheikh Maktoum Hasher Maktoum Al Maktoum, VIP Dubai | Tagged: , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Dubai contractors still concerned over payments

Posted by 7starsdubai on 2009/04/28

source Reuters

GOVERNMENT OBLIGATIONS

Dubai’s government said on Monday it would continue to meet all its contractual obligations, including to contractors, and would not limit the number of construction firms licensed to operate in the emirate.

Emaar Properties EMAR.DU, in which the state is the largest stake holder, said payments for contractors and consultants were based on a credit cycle agreed with each firm.

“All payments that meet the criteria have been honoured and will continue to be cleared, in line with our contractual agreements,” Emaar said in a statement emailed to Reuters.

State-owned Nakheel declined to comment. no one at Dubai Properties and Sama Dubai were not immediately available for comment.

London-based MEED has reported that contractors who are owed money would not be paid for work they have carried out on Dubai government-backed schemes as the emirate will only settle debts with contractors it wishes to work with in future.

The government denied the MEED report but said it would not decide how firms that had received aid would use the funds.

“We are still waiting for payments from a government-linked firm,” a source at an international contracting firm said. “I am expecting a call from them in the next few days … until we speak to them I don’t know what the situation is for us.”

Nasser al-Shaikh, the head of Dubai’s department of finance, said last week the government would not reveal the names of the firms receiving support from the first bond proceeds, although key beneficiaries were developers and companies in which Dubai’s government holds some ownership stake.  Continued…

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