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Aliyev's son, 12, 'buys Lb 30m worth of luxury Dubai property'

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  • Aliyev's son, 12, 'buys Lb 30m worth of luxury Dubai property'

    Azerbaijan president's son, 12, 'buys £30m worth of luxury Dubai property'
    The 12-year-old son of the Azerbaijan president has gone on a
    multi-million pound property spending spree, buying up a series of
    luxury Dubai waterfront mansions.

    By Andrew Hough

    Daily Telegraph/uk
    Published: 10:00PM GMT 05 Mar 2010

    Previous1 of 3 ImagesNext An aerial view of the man-made Palm Jumeirah
    island off the coast of the Gulf emirate of Dubai, which has come to
    resemble the area's extravagance. Photo: AFP
    The seafront of the Atlantis, The Palm Resort is also located at the
    Palm Jumeirah Island. Photo: GETTY
    Azerbaijan's president Ilham Aliyev's son, Heydar, is reported to be
    the owner of the new property. Photo: GETTY

    Heydar Aliyev, the son of Ilham Aliyev, the oil-rich country's
    president, allegedly spent almost £30 million (US$44 million) on nine
    waterfront mansions in the southern Gulf emirate earlier this year,
    reports said.

    The boy, who was 11 at the time, made the purchase in the Palm
    Jumeirah development over two weeks, the Washington Post reported on
    Friday.


    Is this bye-bye Dubai? Heydar's name and his date of birth appeared on
    Dubai Land Department records, which were obtained by the paper.

    The details listed on the property records were the same as those of
    the son of the former Soviet Republic's president, whose annual salary
    is about £150,000 ($228,000).

    The purchases are about the equivalent to 10,000 years' worth of
    salary for the average citizen of the country.

    Industry sources with knowledge of the transactions told the paper the
    purchases were made by a buyer representing Azerbaijan's ruling
    family, with the properties paid for `upfront'.

    It remains unclear whether the boy was given the property as a gift or
    how he could have bought into the development, after officials in
    Baku, the country's capital, refused to comment on the claims.

    "I have no comment on anything. I am stopping this talk. Goodbye,"
    Azer Gasimov, the president's spokesman, told the paper when contacted
    for comment.

    He did not respond to repeated further requests for comment.

    The luxury real estate scheme is popular with multimillionaires,
    British footballers and celebrities and is also home to the world's
    biggest artificial island.

    The island off the coast of Dubai has become a symbol of the emirate's
    reputation for luxury and extravagance.

    Markets across the world were rattled in November after Dubai World,
    the government investment company behind its most ambitious projects
    including Palm Jumeirah, said it was seeking to delay repayment on a
    tranche of its debt.

    The Post said the amount of Dubai property allegedly amassed by the
    family's children, or people with similar names to them, now reaches
    almost £50 million (US$75 million) after similar purchases by his
    daughters.

    The property records also listed the names of Leyla and Arzu Aliyeva,
    whose names, were the same and their ages `roughly' similar.

    The paper said the exact dates of birth could not be established, but
    various reports said Leyla's birthday was the same as the Azerbaijani
    woman who was listed in the documents.

    The president's older daughter, Leyla, is married to Emin Agalarov, a
    wealthy Russian businessman while relatives of the first lady,
    Mehriban, have lucrative business interests in Azerbaijan.

    Agalarov would not comment to the paper when asked whether he had
    helped buy Dubai properties for his wife or Aliyev's other children.

    He said he had "joined businesses and properties" with his wife.

    "We wish not to comment on that,' he said in an email to the paper.

    Azerbaijan, which became an independent nation with the collapse of
    the Soviet Union in 1991, has vast sources of oil.

    It has been ruled almost continuously by the same family with the
    current president taking over from Heydar Aliyev, his father, who was
    president from 1993 until his death in 2003.

    The Aliyev government and its supporters have recently sponsored trips
    to Baku by prominent foreigners and hiring lobbyists to trumpet the
    country's achievements.

    Last year The Daily Telegraph disclosed that Tony Blair's new
    paymaster was an obscure oligarch with business links to Syria, Iran
    and Afghanistan.

    Nizami Piriyev, an Azerbaijan-based millionaire, paid Mr Blair to fly
    to Baku in December to open his new `methanol plant' funded by a
    British government-backed bank.

    Mr Blair typically charges tens of thousands of pounds simply to give
    a speech and is therefore thought to have received more than £100,000
    for his trip to Azerbaijan.

    A spokesman said he was not planning an ongoing relationship with Mr
    Piriyev and did not have any dealings with the family while in office.

    The Post also reported that David Plouffe, President Obama's former
    election campaign manager, visited Baku last year to deliver a
    paid-for speech a few months before Mr Blair.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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