Rich businessman used gagging order to deny having a wife and son

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
A rich businessman and philanthropist has used his wealth and the law to suppress claims made against him, Sky News has learned
Farhaj Sarwar, a high-profile executive based in Dubai, took court action in the UK to attempt to deny he was married or was the father of
his child.Until now, Lili Negabahni risked going to prison for telling her story.The single mother of a six-year-old son was the subject of
a High Court order effectively silencing her for a year and a half.Image:Lili Negabahni risked going to prison for telling her storyMr
Sarwar was behind the legal action
Court papers declare he is Ms Negabahni's husband and the father of her son, although he disputes being either.A DNA test came back with a
99.99% probability he is the boy's father.Mr Sarwar, who until recently ran a company manufacturing and selling humanitarian aid equipment,
has won praise for his work from, among others, a charity with the Prince of Wales as its patron.The businessman's signature appears
endorsing the United Nations entity for gender equality and the empowerment of women, yet he compromised his own wife's empowerment with his
court order.Image:The couple lived the high life in DubaiMs Negabahni, who now lives in London, felt so powerless she considered taking her
own life."My plan was I'll go to the court and if the justice system can't bring me justice, I'll come out and destroy myself to prove I was
right and I was suffering and nobody could hear me," she said.The couple lived the high life in the United Arab Emirates, but their
lifestyle and their relationship ended when she told her husband she was pregnant.She fled to the UK and she gave birth alone."I took a bus
to the hospital
Suddenly I felt my water broke
I was so shy and embarrassed I got off the bus and I walked all the way to the hospital," she recalled.When she got there she fainted and
was too weak to give birth that night.Image:Farhaj Sarwar is a rich businessman based in the United Arab EmiratesMs Negabahni recorded some
of the meetings she had with her husband to try and persuade him to provide for his son.In one recording, he threatens to take the boy from
his mother if she continues to insist he's the father."If he takes my name I swear to God no matter what I will take him from you," he says
in one video.Mr Sarwar declined to comment on the Sky News report.The intervention of solicitor Mark Lewis led to the legal ruling being
overturned
He believes the law cannot just be the preserve of the rich."If a person is getting a gagging injunction they have to say we will pay for
your legal representation to fight us, so the courts are actually looking at the truth of the position between two equal parties, rather
than one party with loads of money and one party with no money," he said.Sky News has seen a document where Mr Sarwar offered his wife more