Mercedes owner discovers secret crash after car changes colour


Salam Al Amir
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The owner of a Mercedes-Benz 400 discovered that their car had secretly been involved in an accident after the car began to change colour.

An Emirati, 28, bought the luxury car in 2014 from a showroom in Abu Dhabi for his wife.

The couple had taken a bank loan to pay Dh561,500 for the car.

Four years later, the husband noticed the paint colour on the rear end of the vehicle had begun to change.

He visited the showroom, where he was told the car had been in a crash before its sale, although he had not been informed of that before the sale.

The man's lawyer, Ali Al Hammadi, said his client then informed the showroom in an email that he had discovered the car was faulty and requested that it be replaced.

“His email was acknowledged by the showroom, which responded to it on July 11 last year, informing him that a proposal for a replacement car was being issued,” the lawyer said.

But the showroom then rejected the owner’s request to provide him with an official report on the car's damage. So the buyer lodged a complaint with the Ministry of Economy.

When an amicable settlement was not achieved, the Emirati man filed a case with the Abu Dhabi Commercial Court.

An expert told the court the German car was not imported directly from the car maker but through Yemen's port of Hodeidah.

“The damage in the car’s rear may have been caused during the shipping of the vehicle through the port and at the time of its sale," the expert's report said.

"Its price should have been reduced by approximately Dh28,000."

It said that only the damaged part was repainted.

The court ordered the showroom to repay the full price of the car, Dh561,500, to the claimant and pay all legal fees.

Changing visa rules

For decades the UAE has granted two and three year visas to foreign workers, tied to their current employer. Now that's changing.

Last year, the UAE cabinet also approved providing 10-year visas to foreigners with investments in the UAE of at least Dh10 million, if non-real estate assets account for at least 60 per cent of the total. Investors can bring their spouses and children into the country.

It also approved five-year residency to owners of UAE real estate worth at least 5 million dirhams.

The government also said that leading academics, medical doctors, scientists, engineers and star students would be eligible for similar long-term visas, without the need for financial investments in the country.

The first batch - 20 finalists for the Mohammed bin Rashid Medal for Scientific Distinction.- were awarded in January and more are expected to follow.

Libya's Gold

UN Panel of Experts found regime secretly sold a fifth of the country's gold reserves. 

The panel’s 2017 report followed a trail to West Africa where large sums of cash and gold were hidden by Abdullah Al Senussi, Qaddafi’s former intelligence chief, in 2011.

Cases filled with cash that was said to amount to $560m in 100 dollar notes, that was kept by a group of Libyans in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso.

A second stash was said to have been held in Accra, Ghana, inside boxes at the local offices of an international human rights organisation based in France.