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Tulip Siddiq given London flat by developer with links to Awami League: FT report

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Tulip Siddiq, economic secretary to the UK Treasury, was handed a two-bedroom flat near King's Cross in 2004 without making a payment

Desk Report

Publisted at 11:20 AM, Sat Jan 4th, 2025

Tulip Siddiq, Sheikh Hasina's niece and the current UK's city minister, was given a central London apartment by an individual connected to the Awami League, reports the Financial Times (FT).

Tulip Siddiq, economic secretary to the UK Treasury, was handed a two-bedroom flat near King's Cross in 2004 without making a payment, according to previously unreported Land Registry filings, according to the UK’s based media. 

The filings indicate that the donor was Abdul Motalif, a developer and associate of people linked to Sheikh Hasina. 

The King's Cross property, which Siddiq still owns, was purchased in January 2001 for £195,000, the filings show. A neighbouring flat in the building was sold in August for £650,000. 

“Any suggestion that Tulip Siddiq’s ownership of this property, or any other property is in any way linked to support for the Awami League, would be categorically wrong,” Financial Times quoted a spokesperson for the minister said.

Motalif confirmed to the Financial Times in a phone call that he bought the King’s Cross property but declined to comment on what he did with it.

“⁠Following financial support provided by Tulip’s parents to an acquaintance during a challenging time in his life, he subsequently transferred a property he then owned into Tulip’s ownership as an act of gratitude for her parents’ support,” said a person familiar with the matter.

Details of the gift raise fresh questions about Tulip’s ability to distance herself from corruption allegations, having been named in a probe last month by the Anti-Corruption Commission in Bangladesh.

The Bangladeshi investigation came after a political rival of Sheikh Hasina accused her family, including Tulip Siddiq, of taking a cut from a Russia-backed nuclear power project, claims they have denied.

The Financial Times reported that Tulip Siddiq holds a brief in the British government that includes responsibility for measures against money-laundering and clamping down on illicit finance. Electoral roll data shows that Siddiq lived in the King's Cross flat in the early 2000s and that her siblings resided in the property for several years afterwards. Siddiq has declared rental income from two flats in her MP’s declaration of financial interests.  

Motalif, who is now 70, lives in south-east London. Companies House filings show him listed as the owner of a now-dissolved small property services company. Electoral roll data shows that he allowed Moin Ghani, a lawyer who went on to represent the government led by the Awami League and has been photographed with Sheikh Hasina, to live in the King's Cross flat before he gave it to Siddiq. Ghani did not respond to a request for comment. The data also shows that Motalif shared a residential address in south-east London with Mojibul Islam, the son of a former Awami League MP, between 2014 and 2024. Motalif and Islam both confirmed that they had been registered at the south-east London address.

Citing Land Registry filings, The Financial Times reported that, the gift of the King’s Cross property was made before Siddiq became an MP, meaning she was not required to make disclosures about it. The papers show that, in 2018, Siddiq extended the King’s Cross property’s lease for £90,000. She also bought a flat jointly with her husband for £865,000 in her London constituency of Hampstead and Highgate. 

Land Registry documents indicate there is now no mortgage on either flat. The person familiar with the matter said that five years after Siddiq bought her constituency flat with her husband, he “paid off the remainder of the mortgage using solely the couple’s own funds”. 

Tulip Siddiq was reprimanded by parliament’s standards commissioner last year after she failed to disclose rental income on the constituency flat. Before becoming an MP in 2015, Siddiq worked for several charities and as a consultant for Philip Gould Associates, the firm of the late Labour peer and strategist. 

Downing Street said last month that UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer “has confidence” in Tulip Siddiq, adding that she had “denied any involvement in the allegations made” about the Russia-backed nuclear power plant. 

UK government officials also said they had seen no evidence of wrongdoing by Tulip Siddiq. 

Tulip Siddiq has been a Labour party member since she was 16. But she also worked for a time within the Awami League’s EU and UK “lobbying unit and election strategy team”, according to a Labour blog post that has since been deleted.  

UK-based affiliates of the Awami League have campaigned alongside Tulip Siddiq at multiple British general elections, including the vote last year that brought Labour to power, according to people familiar with the matter.  

“Had it not been for your help. I would never have been able to stand here as a British MP,” Tulip Siddiq told a crowd of the Awami League’s supporters in 2015, shortly after she became an MP, at an event held in London to honour Sheikh Hasina. 

Since 2022, Tulip Siddiq has rented a £2.1mn London home owned by Abdul Karim, an executive member of the UK wing of the Awami League. She moved into the property outside her constituency after it was purchased in July 2022, according to filings.  An ally of Siddiq said that she was paying “market rates” and that the relationship between her and Karim had been declared properly to the parliamentary authorities. 

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