Additional complications and delays faced by the acquisition of Newcastle United, the Saudi crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, after the English Premier League soccer received documents against Saudi Arabia's accusations of piracy, according to the British newspaper "Sun".

In the event of a deal, the Saudi Sovereign Fund, which is headed by Bin Salman, will own 80% of Newcastle Club for $ 375 million, in a coalition that includes businesswoman Amanda Stephley and the Robin brothers.

Mike Ashley has owned Newcastle since 2007 and put it up for sale in 2017.

The evidence alleges - according to the newspaper "Sun" - that it shows the direct link between the Saudi state and the "B OutQ" channel, which sports activities and broadcasts illegally to its clients.

Although the British media reports were talking about the close of the completion of the deal and talking about the coach who receives the technical model of the team and the stars contracted by "Macabes" in the Saudi "era", these documents came to place an additional obstacle to the deal that is already suffering from international condemnation campaigns against it, due to The deteriorating human rights file in Saudi Arabia and the case of the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

Saudi Arabia has denied any links to B outQQ, which it claims is broadcasting from Colombia and Cuba.

The "primerliga" test for new club owners states that they should avoid providing him with "wrong, incorrect or misleading" information, and it prevents digital piracy.

The Premier League, the European Football Confederation, the European Football Confederation and the Spanish League have all tried to take legal measures to stop the piracy carried out by "B-Q", and all the competitions issued statements condemning this "described theft".

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The Qatari network, "BN", which has the rights to broadcast most of the sports competitions in the Middle East and North Africa, demanded that the deal be stopped due to Saudi Arabia's connection to the "B-Q" channel.

Amnesty International had previously condemned the possible purchase of Newcastle, and last January the European Union criticized - in a statement - Saudi Arabia for failing to stop broadcasting the piracy channel.

So did Washington, which, in an official report, made harsh criticism of Saudi Arabia and included it on the list of "priority monitoring countries", due to its failure to fight piracy, in addition to Washington's announcement of its intention to start an unusually unusual review of Saudi Arabia because of its continued failure to protect intellectual property rights. .