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			by Jamie Doward and Jessica Hodgson  
			The Observer - UK 
			11-22-2003 
			from 
			Rense Website 
			
			  
			
			A powerful banking group with close 
			links to the Pentagon, which has also invested money on behalf of 
			the Bin Laden family, is in talks to bail out beleaguered Daily 
			Telegraph owner Conrad Black.  
			 
			The revelation suggests that Britain's bestselling broadsheet - 
			coveted by rival newspaper barons because of its political influence 
			- may not go under the hammer after all, as Lord Black tries to 
			quell a shareholder rebellion in the face of allegations that he and 
			several acolytes pocketed millions of dollars that was not theirs to 
			take.  
			 
			Daily Express owner Richard Desmond and the Daily Mail & General 
			Trust, which owns the Daily Mail, are keen to buy the Telegraph 
			titles, despite the fact that questions over the concentration of 
			media ownership would be raised.  
			 
			The Carlyle Group, known as the Ex-Presidents Club because of the 
			number of former world leaders it employs, is considering taking a 
			stake in Hollinger International, which owns the Telegraph titles, 
			the Jerusalem Post and the Chicago Sun-Times, according to those 
			close to the firm.  
			
				
				'It's unusual for a group of assets 
				to come to the market like this. We would look to sell off the 
				Jerusalem Post and Hollinger's stake in the New York Sun. Conrad 
				[Black] would have to step out of management, but that does not 
				mean he would have to let go of his equity stake,' said a 
				Carlyle source. 'Ideally, we would look to take a 25-40 per cent 
				stake. That would allow us to put people on the board,' the 
				source added.  
			 
			
			The move would represent a coup for 
			Black, who is desperate not to sell the Telegraph titles, which have 
			given him considerable influence within British politics and earned 
			him a close friendship with Margaret Thatcher.  
			 
			Carlyle - which employs former Prime Minister John Major as a 
			director, boasts George Bush Snr and his Secretary of State, 
			James 
			Baker, as advisers, and is headed by Frank Carlucci, Ronald Reagan's 
			Defense Secretary - has invested in media firms previously. The 
			group once owned 40 per cent of France's Le Figaro, and more 
			recently acquired part of French conglomerate Vivendi's publishing 
			assets.  
			 
			It also part-owns Qinetiq, the Government's privatized defense 
			research laboratories, and CSX Lines, a logistics firm that 
			specializes in shipping heavy equipment for the military. In the 
			past, Carlyle has owned Vinnell, a company that trained the Saudi 
			army.  
			 
			If Carlyle - which, despite being only 15 years old, manages more 
			than $14 billion in funds on behalf of investors such as George Soros and the Bin Laden family (who are estranged from their son 
			Osama) - does take a stake in Hollinger, questions are bound to be 
			asked over the links between the two firms, both of which have 
			powerful links to the military.  
			 
			Leading foreign policy hawks Richard Perle and Henry Kissinger sit 
			on the Hollinger board. Black himself is a member of the secretive
			
			Bilderberg group, an organization comprising the world's leading 
			businessmen and politicians, which some have accused of being an 
			alternative world government.  
			 
			In a separate move, it has emerged that Wall Street fund manager 
			Tweedy Browne will take legal action against the Hollinger board if 
			it is not satisfied with the company's actions.  
			 
			Shareholders are angry that tens of millions of dollars that Black 
			and fellow directors took in 'non-compete' fees did not go to 
			Hollinger.  
			
				
				'I want to know how this board came 
				to pay out a red cent to these people,' said Tweedy Browne 
				analyst Laura Jeresky.  
			 
			
			Hollinger is the subject of an inquiry 
			by the US Securities and Exchange Commission. Investigators are keen 
			to understand the company's relationship with Ravelston Corporation, 
			which is privately owned by Black and has been the beneficiary of 
			millions of dollars which shareholders say should be returned to 
			them.  
			 
			Toronto-based Ravelston pays millions of dollars in management fees 
			to Ravelston Management Inc (RMI). There are suggestions that RMI 
			may be based in a tax haven. Hollinger spokesman Paul Healy declined 
			to comment.  
			
			  
			
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