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Businessman Al Fayed sells for reported $2.3 billion
Qatar royal family buys UK Harrods store |
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A spokesman for Lazard, which advised the Fayed family trust, declined to confirm the value of the deal which was reported by Sky News, citing unnamed sources.
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Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani
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"What I can assure you is Qatar Holding will do their best to upgrade this monument, to make it even greater and better for the tourism and the British people," Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani told reporters in an impromptu news conference in the store in London's Knightsbridge area.
Al Fayed, 77, is retiring as chairman of Harrods and believed Qatar Holding would continue to promote it as one of the world's foremost brands, Lazard International chairman Ken Costa said in the statement.
"After 25 years as chairman of Harrods, Mohamed Al Fayed has decided to retire and to spend more time with his children and grandchildren," Costa said.
"He has built Harrods into a unique luxury brand with worldwide recognition" and wanted to ensure this legacy would continue, he added.
"Qatar Holdings was specifically chosen by the Trust as they had both the vision and financial capacity to support the long term successful growth of Harrods."
A colorful figure, Fayed waged a long campaign claiming his son Dodi and Princess Diana, who died together in a Paris car crash in 1997, were murdered in a conspiracy.
Qatar Holding will be the fifth owner of Harrods since its creation in 1840. Credit Suisse advised it on the deal.
