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Newcastle serve Manchester United a takeover warning amid potential Premier League investigation

Manchester United's takeover process continues to rumble on and the debate currently surrounding Newcastle United's owners emphasises the need for correct decisions to be made at Old Trafford.

Newcastle were taken over in 2021 in a £300million purchase by Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund (PIF). That deal is again front and centre as part of an ongoing legal battle between golf’s PGA Tour and the Saudi-backed LIV Golf tour.

The North East club are confident no fresh action will be taken against them because the Premier League have "legally binding assurances" surrounding separation between the Saudi state and the PIF - a sticking point before the deal was given the go-ahead.

READ MORE: United takeover latest: Zilliacus apologises as revised bids 'fall short' for Glazers

But Premier League chief executive Richard Masters told MPs on Tuesday he could not comment on whether his organisation was investigating who had control of Newcastle.

Court documents published in the United States last month described the PIF as “a sovereign instrumentality of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia” and PIF governor and Newcastle chairman Yasir Al-Rumayyan as “a sitting minister of the Saudi government”.

The documents appeared to raise fresh questions over the link between the PIF and the Saudi state. The Premier League granted permission for the PIF-led takeover in October 2021 after it received “legally-binding assurances” that the Saudi state would not have control of the club, and was urged to re-examine the takeover by human rights group Amnesty International after the court documents were published.

Masters was asked about the documents by Digital, Culture, Media and Sport select committee member Clive Efford on Tuesday, and said: “I

Read more on manchestereveningnews.co.uk