The donor was a sheikh, whose view of "giving money to a royal charity" may have been rather biased by the custom in his own sheikhdom. Paper money in a suitcase could be the normal method there, with no questions asked about how much of it reaches the charity and how much mysteriously vanishes on the way.
The charity received it, and presumably counted it (with witnesses) and put it through the accounts as a donation from the Sheikh under that day's date.
Is anyone suggesting that less arrived at the charity office than were handed to Prince Charles or his representative? Who physically carried the (rather heavy) suitcase to the charity? Who counted the notes? Has the sheikh claimed that he expected to receive a knighthood in return for his generosity - and was he disappointed? Does his name appear in the honours lists? Who was PM when this cash-for-honours story is set, since the honours list is compiled by the PM to be signed off by the monarch. What is Fawcett's story, and why is he referred to as a dodgy character?
We are getting a rather sketchy account of the affair. More details and some confirmations are needed. An independent enquiry would clarify the murk.
WORD PAIRS -APRIL 2026 (Old thread full )


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