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UK Government U-Turn Over Saudi Prison Deal‏

© AP Photo / Hasan JamaliAl-Faisaliya tower is seen through metal bars from a nearby building under construction, during a sand storm in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Friday, April 25, 2015.
Al-Faisaliya tower is seen through metal bars from a nearby building under construction, during a sand storm in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Friday, April 25, 2015. - Sputnik International
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A row over a British pensioner sentenced to 350 lashes in Saudi Arabia has helped to expose cracks in David Cameron's cabinet over its controversial relationship with the Sharia law run legal system and its decision to withdraw from a US$9million prison deal with the Middle Eastern country.

The British government has been forced to face up to public scrutiny over its relationship with the oil rich nation after the emotional case of a 74-year-old British cancer victim facing 350 lashes in Saudi Arabia. And it seems domestic issues are appearing to change international relations.

Britain's Foreign Office has received confirmation that 74-year-old Karl Andree will not receive a public flogging for drinking alcohol. It follows a high profile campaign by his family and the British media, who have called on David Cameron three times, to step in and save the man from the lashes, fearing he would not survive the floggings.

Yet in the wings of the emotional and public row over the British pensioner sentenced to 350 lashes was a conflict within David Cameron's cabinet over a controversial prison deal with Saudi Arabia. Justice Secretary Michael Gove, who was at loggerheads with Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond, wanted to pull out of the deal because he said the government should not prop up a regime which uses beheading, stoning, crucifixion and lashing to punish its citizens. Yet according to Philip Hammond, Mr Gove was naïve in his approach.

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An exchange of letters between Gove and Hammond revealed that the justice secretary wanted human rights concerns to come first — meanwhile, the foreign secretary insisted that "wider interests of the British government" were more important.

The Prime Minister's official spokeswoman has since confirmed that the UK has now decided to withdraw from the controversial US$9 million prisons deal with the Saudi justice system saying it reflected the government's decision to focus on domestic priorities. However, the government's wider interests with the Saudi Arabian government are often kept secret.

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