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Updated Sat, February 4, 2012.
401.www.itn.co.uk12300
402.www.peevish.co.uk12200
403.www.bwspeakers.com12000
404.portico.bl.uk11800
405.www.manchester2002-uk.com11500
406.www.merseyworld.com11400
407.www.colt.net11400
408.www.bristol-city.gov.uk11200
409.www.companies-house.gov.uk11100
410.www.telewest.co.uk10800
411.www.xpressconstruction.com10800
412.www.yellgroup.com10800
413.www.citibank.co.uk10500
414.www.myoffers.co.uk10400
415.www.zen.co.uk10300
416.www.ntl.com9990
417.www.cineworld.co.uk9980
418.www.meanfiddler.com9790
419.www.chester.ac.uk9690
420.www.racingpost.co.uk9480
421.www.crewe-nantwich.gov.uk9290
422.www.aboutproperty.co.uk9270
423.www.littlewoods-online.com9170
424.www.kia.co.uk8970
425.www.abellabooks.com8950
426.w.moreover.com8840
427.www.regtransfers.co.uk8440
428.www.sunsail.com8240
429.www.pickaweb.co.uk8150
430.www.londontheatre.co.uk8120
431.www.threerivers.gov.uk7870
432.www.gner.co.uk7860
433.www.nickys-nursery.co.uk7820
434.www.guava.co.uk7760
435.www.englandhockey.co.uk7530
436.www.westminster-abbey.org7310
437.www.thisissouthwales.co.uk6960
438.uk.multimap.com6880
439.www.fidelity.co.uk6680
440.www.south-online.co.uk6620
441.www.keycamp.co.uk6470
442.www.020.co.uk6440
443.www.hotels-london.co.uk6410
444.www.londoneye.com6350
445.www.capitalfm.com6110
446.www.talkbritain.co.uk5990
447.order.1and1.co.uk5980
448.www.sabmiller.com5870
449.www.easyjet.co.uk5820
450.www.smile.co.uk5810
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409. www.companies-house.gov.uk

Rating: 11100 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.companies-house.gov.uk' on the other websites

www.companies-house.gov.uk

Companies House

Description: Company Information

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Saudi prince 'battered servant to death', court told
Grandson of Saudi king denies prosecution claims that he was having a sexual relationship with victim Bandar AbulazizA Saudi prince strangled and battered his servant to death in a ferocious sexually motivated murder, a court heard today.Saud bin Abdulaziz bin Nasir al Saud, a grandson of the billionaire king of Saudi Arabia, is accused of killing his male aide in a brutal attack in a luxury London hotel room earlier this year.The bloodied body of the 32-year-old servant, Bandar Abdulaziz, referred to in court simply as Bandar, was found in a suite at the five-star Landmark Hotel on 15 February after his master raised the alarm, claiming Bandar was suffering the effects of an earlier street robbery.But police soon realised all was not quite as it seemed, the Old Bailey heard. A post-mortem report revealed the dead man had bite marks to his face, his lips were split open and there was evidence of manual compression on his neck. Though there was no evidence of a recent sexual assault, semen – possibly belonging to the prince – was detected on the victim's underpants.Officers then discovered CCTV footage showing the 34-year-old prince physically assaulting Bandar in the Landmark lift twice in the weeks leading up to the murder. The film, shown to the jury today, showed stocky Saud baring his teeth as he repeatedly punched his slimmer victim in the head.Another camera apparently caught Saud "kicking out" at his victim outside a restaurant in the exclusive district of Knightsbridge, just hours before the murder. After this skirmish, the two men then headed back to the hotel, where they drank a bottle of champagne and knocked back six shots of Sex On The Beach cocktail, the jury was told. By the next morning, Bandar was dead.The court heard that the victim, an orphan who had been adopted by a middle class family, had met Saud through friends and spent his last three years travelling with the prince as an "occasional companion". The two men arrived in London on 20 January after visiting Milan, Budapest, Prague, Marrakesh and the Maldives.On arrival in London, they were collected from Heathrow airport by a chauffeur working for the Saudi embassy and taken to the Landmark Hotel.Jonathan Laidlaw, QC, for the prosecution, said the men would spend their time shopping, eating out and at bars and nightclubs, often staying up late and sleeping in, and not leaving the hotel until early the next afternoon.Jurors were told the defendant was a member of the Saudi royal family who had studied political science at university. "His father is a nephew of the king and his mother is a daughter of the king," said Laidlaw. "He has the title of prince," the barrister added.After his arrest, the prince told police in a statement that Bandar was his friend and not his servant – or indeed his lover. He denies he is gay, and claims to have a girlfriend back in Saudi Arabia, where homosexuality is a capital offence under Sharia law.But the prosecution say there is ample evidence to prove he is lying about both the nature of his relationship with Bandar and his sexuality in an attempt to cover up the murder.Prosecutor Jonathan Laidlaw, QC, told the jury that while a defendant's sexuality would normally be of "absolutely no relevance to a criminal trial", it was crucial in this case because there was a "sexual element to his mistreatment of Bandar.""The defendant's keeping back of his homosexuality might in other circumstances, because of the cultural background perhaps, be explained away by embarrassment, or, indeed, fear," said Laidlaw. "But the defendant's concealing of the sexual aspect to the abuse to his victim was for altogether more sinister reasons, and it does tend to suggest that there was a sexual element to the circumstances of what it is that actually happened in room 312 before Bandar died."As this evidence was read out, the prince's father listened impassively in the public gallery.The jury later heard that two male escorts have come forward to tell police that the prince paid them for sexual acts during his stay in London, and that a copy of the 2009 Spartacus International Gay Guide was round in his hotel room. "Compromising" photographs of Bandar, partially naked, were discovered on his mobile phone, and computer records showed that he had been browsing "gay massage or spa websites and male escort sites".A porter at the Landmark hotel formed the impression that Saud was the prince's servant but also that they were involved in a "relationship of sorts and were gay", the jury was told.Another said the victim was "quiet, he did not talk much and he was instructed what to do", the court heard."Contrary to his claims of equal treatment, the defendant travelled in business class whiles Bandar flew in economy," said Laidlaw.The manager of a restaurant where the men dined January thought "from their behaviour and the way they spoke that they were gay".Laidlaw said the prince "flirted" with a gay barman at a hotel where he was drinking on another occasion and "suggested that they go out socially together".There was one double bed in the bedroom shared by the prince and his aide and there were occasions when the two men might have shared it but others when the servant apparently slept on the floor behind the sofa, the court heard.The jurors were told that after initially denying the killing, the prince changed his story. At first, he insisted that Bandar had been attacked and robbed of €3,000 on the Edgware Road in central London three weeks before the murder, and had died of these lingering injuries.Now, said Laidlaw, the prince admits carrying out the killing so it would be for them to decide if he were guilty of murder or only manslaughter.The 34-year-old denies murder and one count of grievous bodily harm with intent. The trial continues.Saudi ArabiaHelen Piddguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Man 'murdered in farm burglary'
Sussex Police believe a man found dead at a farm may have been murdered when he disturbed burglars.
bbc.co.uk
Nigella Lawson: I exploded the oven and got raided by police
TV cook recalls how cooking for Salman Rushdie led to a police raid.
telegraph.co.uk
Forbidden love
My parents hate me: Forced marriage tale of gay teenager
bbc.co.uk
Defence cuts: The Royal Navy's decision to bet its future on aircraft carriers could be a gamble too far
The Royal Navy has bet its future on aircraft carriers and is cutting the rest of the surface to pay for them. Andrew Gilligan asks if the senior service is taking too costly a gamble.
telegraph.co.uk