A STUDENT at a North-East University who was accused of spying says he does not resent the friend who reported him to the United Arab Emirates state security.

Matthew Hedges, who is doing a PhD at Durham University, was sentenced to life imprisonment by the Gulf state after being accused of working for MI6, before being pardoned by the nation’s president days later.

Having spent the last month back home in the UK with his wife Daniela Tejada, the 31-year-old said he does not resent his Emirati friend.

Durham University PhD student Matthew Hedges and his wife Daniela Tejada

“He was someone I met through work and we were friends, yes. He was in court and gave evidence against me,” he told The Guardian.

“It would be easy to feel anger towards him but I have no clue under what circumstance he has got in touch with the state security. I can’t blame him.

“He might not have had another option. It’s impossible to hold any form of resentment because he himself is a victim of the system.”

Mr Hedges, who started his PhD work in Durham in 2013 and is originally from Exeter, has previously described how he was questioned for up to 15 hours a day and forced to wear ankle cuffs during his ordeal.

Although he was never physically tortured, Mr Hedges, said he was made to suffer psychologically, and that his aggressive interrogators left him “so scared and on edge”.

He was arrested at Dubai Airport as he tried to leave on May 5, after he travelled to the country to interview sources about the country’s foreign policy and security strategy.

His wife mounted a campaign to free her husband and Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt personally discussed the case with UAE leaders.

In October, Durham University issued a statement calling for Mr Hedges to be treated with proper fairness after affirming his status as a “PhD student in good standing”.

He was freed in November but officials persisted in calling him an MI6 spy - a claim denied by family and colleagues.

An official told reporters in Abu Dhabi that Mr Hedges was “100% a full-time secret service operative” who was in the country “to steal the UAE’s sensitive security national secrets for his paymasters”.

He said the Briton’s pardon came in response to a letter from his family appealing for clemency and due to the historical close ties between the UK and the UAE.