INDEPENDENT – IN THE PRINCESS LATIFA AFFAIR, MARY ROBINSON HAS WILLINGLY TARNISHED HER REPUTATION FOR DUBAI’S REGIME

“Not only is this a clear misuse of Robinson’s former office as UN high commissioner for human rights, it undermines the movement for the fair treatment of women”- David Haigh

There’s a saying in show business that you can spend 20 years becoming an overnight star. In politics, the same is true in reverse, as the sad case of Mary Robinson and Princess Latifa of Dubai shows.

In a world of Trump, Le Pen, Salvini, Bolsonaro and numerous others, the likes of Robinson have stood out as beacons of hope. To the world outside Ireland, she distinguished herself in her seven years as president and went on to serve five years as the UN high commissioner for human rights. As a young law student at Southampton University, she was someone I found inspiring.

The fact that she has now turned her efforts to fighting climate change Mary Robinson and Princess Latifa of Dubai – specifically the social justice that underpins fighting it – is also admirable. But in promoting her book Climate Justice: Hope, Resilience and the Fight for a Sustainable Future, she has waded into murky waters that have, at best, left serious questions about her links with friends in high places, and, at worst, tarnished her reputation as a global stateswoman that took 30 years to build.

Robinson got herself dragged into the case of Princess Latifa Al Maktoum, one of a couple of dozen offspring of Sheikh Mohammed, the ruler of Dubai and second-most-powerful man in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), and five of Latifa’s companions.

Ten months ago, Latifa enlisted my help as she made a daring escape from the gilded cage in which she felt imprisoned, recording a 40-minute video before she went in which she explained why she did not want to stay there. Her escape ended when she was kidnapped off the coast of India by crack UAE and Indian troops and taken back to Dubai, where she has been kept behind closed doors ever since.

After BBC2 screened a documentary about the kidnapping on 6 December, comparing it to the capture on the streets of Cambridge of Latifa’s older sister Shamsa in 2000, Dubai’s status as a destination of choice for European tourists was suddenly under threat. The UAE needed a PR offensive to put the world’s mind at rest.

That’s when Sheikh Mohammed’s wife, Princess Haya, appears to have contacted Robinson and asked her to come to Dubai and vouch that Latifa was safe and well. Robinson used the promotion of her book to justify the trip, and even claims to have given a copy to Latifa when they met over a well-supervised lunch in mid-December.

Since then Robinson has described Latifa as “vulnerable” and “troubled”, says she “regrets trying to escape” from Dubai and making the video, says she was in a “serious medical situation” but receiving psychiatric care, and is now “in the loving care of her family”.

This is shocking on two fronts. Firstly, what is a former UN human rights commissioner doing apparently providing cover for a regime that the UN has censured in numerous human rights reports and that has failed to respond to the UN body investigating the kidnap of Latifa and her five companions last March?

If it is the case, this is a clear misuse of her former office and undermines the work of the current UN human rights commissioner. Secondly, does Robinson seriously expect anyone to believe her, given that she is spouting almost word-for-word Dubai’s script about Latifa after a trip paid for by the very family Latifa was trying to escape from?

It’s actually worse than shocking. By assisting Dubai’s rulers, I believe Robinson has undermined the entire movement for fair treatment of women, including #MeToo. No-one can claim Latifa has grown up in poverty, but what’s clear is that her human rights have been violated over decades.

Robinson may feel she’s just doing the right thing, but as far as I’m concerned, she’s effectively thwarting the pursuit of justice and advancement of equality for millions of women across the Middle East and in the Gulf.

It may be that she didn’t know the full story about Latifa, but whose fault is that? Robinson never contacted me, Latifa’s barrister Toby Cadman or Detained as the princess’s representative or the other five who were attacked and kidnapped alongside Latifa; nor did she contact Amnesty International or Human Rights Watch who support our campaign.

I believe Robinson is interfering in a way that could have cost Latifa her life. Even now, the powers-that-be in Dubai may be abusing psychiatry to keep Latifa docile (as happened with her sister Shamsa).

There are two mildly mitigating factors in Robinson’s involvement. Firstly, she has at least brought us proof that Latifa is – or appears to be – still alive. Many of us had doubts following the kidnap, so that’s a small piece of good news if confirmed.

Secondly, is it possible Robinson was duped by an old friend in Princess Haya? Haya is a UN goodwill ambassador, and I wonder if she called on Robinson to help solve what Robinson described as “a family dilemma”. But if that’s the case, she was naïve, and the UN should investigate Haya for her involvement in the matter and strip her of her status.

And it begs the question: how many other people are denied their lives and rights, simply because someone knows someone who’s a friend of someone?

But the mishandling of the Robinson affair has backfired to such a degree it may actually help secure Latifa’s freedom. The world is now watching Dubai.

There will no doubt be another PR stunt, anything it seems but allowing Latifa and her sister their freedom.

How will Dubai and Latifa’s father glaze over a growing international scandal that could very well contribute to the downfall of his rule? Myself, along with Latifa’s best friend Tiina and the others campaigning for her release only hope the next headline we read is not “Latifa commits suicide”.

Robinson was rightly revered for her life’s work, and that work is not invalidated by her totally unacceptable interference in the case of Princess Latifa. But in my opinion, her reputation has been tarnished by this, and it will take a lot of explaining for her to undo the damage she has caused both herself and the cause of human rights.

Human rights should be sacrosanct, and not a commodity to be sold by former defenders of them, much in the same way that English law should not be sold by retired UK judges that prop up the UAE’s courts. Justice should be a basic right in a civilized world.

THE GUARDIAN – THERE’S NO JUSTICE IN THE UAE – I LEARNED THAT IN A DUBAI PRISON – DAVID HAIGH

The case of the British academic Matthew Hedges, like mine, shows the British government must take a much harder line.

In criticizing the British government for not doing enough to help her husband, the academic Matthew Hedges, Daniela Tejada is not alone. She joins a long list of victims and their families who assumed the British government would go into bat for them, only to be sorely disappointed.

The plight of Hedges, who was convicted of spying and given a life prison sentence, evokes my own experience. When I was lured to Dubai in 2014 and thrown into prison without charge, I eagerly awaited the first visit of officials from the British embassy. Yet all I got were two non-Brits hired by a diplomatic staffing agency, and all they said they could do was ensure I was being treated reasonably and getting adequate food.

There was no attempt to protest about the disregard of all basic judicial principles. They even failed by their own remit, as they didn’t get me the food I needed (I’d just had stomach surgery).

The conditions I was kept in were, at times, appalling. There were beatings, I was raped and at one stage a guard said to me, “Be careful, British prisoners die here.” It was hot, there was overcrowding, and access to lawyers and other personal representatives was often limited to a few minutes a week, with a guard listening in.

In my 22 months’ incarceration, I had one humane head of the prison, but he was quickly demoted to a lesser jail after trumped-up charges were leveled alleging he had taken bribes. The authorities clearly don’t want prisoners to be treated humanely.

Others have had the same experience of Gulf justice, along with the advice from the British embassy that it would be unwise to go public as this would only antagonize the Emiratis.

When I got out and started campaigning to help others held in Dubai, we knocked that on the head. High-profile cases such as those of Jamie Harron, Billy Barclay, and Ellie Holman were ultimately successful because we did go public, and in a way that threatened Dubai’s reputation as a tourism destination. Harron and Barclay were “pardoned” for crimes they didn’t commit, which sticks in the craw, but at least we got them out.

It was clear the embassy’s credo was that the plight of a few individuals shouldn’t be allowed to hamper the UK’s good trading relations with the UAE, but the Hedges case suggests the government’s appeasement has achieved nothing. Publicity isn’t an issue here – this is now a global story – but the Emiratis still refuse to be embarrassed into releasing Hedges – conceding only on Friday that they were considering the family’s appeal for clemency.

The former Leeds United director David Haigh was acquitted in the United Arab Emirates of criminal charges relating to a tweet.
The former Leeds United director David Haigh was acquitted in the United Arab Emirates of criminal charges relating to a tweet.

There are four things the government should be doing.

First, revise its travel advice. The UAE’s economy depends heavily on tourism, but people who go there have no idea that if they fall foul of the law they can’t rely on internationally accepted norms of justice. You sup with the devil when you go to the Emirates, and the foreign office should make this clear. (That includes urging Emirates airline to warn passengers that if they drink on a flight they could easily be arrested when they land in Dubai.)

Second, revise its investment guidance. The UK still encourages firms to invest in Emirati companies with the implicit assumption that they face fair business conditions. Again, the judicial situation makes it a highly risky country to do business with.

Third, suspend Britain’s extradition treaty with the UAE. British judges have made a succession of judgments confirming that UK nationals won’t get a fair trial in the UAE, yet we still have an extradition treaty under which the Emirates apply to get people they don’t like sent to face show trials, such as the five-minute Hedges hearing this week. And because we give people fair trials here, extradition requests cost the British taxpayer millions.

Fourth, stop British judges from taking retirement postings in the UAE. It is little appreciated that when British judges retire they can pick up lucrative part-time work in the Dubai finance courts, yet they merely reinforce the unjust Dubai legal system by giving it respectability it doesn’t deserve.

Of one thing we can be sure: the treatment of Hedges and others is not anti-British. The UAE is as vicious with its own citizens as it is with foreigners, as the case of Sheikha Latifa, the daughter of Dubai’s ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, shows. Earlier this year she came to us for help as she tried to escape Dubai, citing years of abuse and torture in the royal palace, and got as far as Indian coastal waters before UAE troops violently kidnapped her and took her back to Dubai. She hasn’t been seen since.

Her story, and that of the kidnap of her sister Sheikha Shamsa in the UK, will feature in a BBC2 documentary on 6 December. It confirms that we’re dealing with a vicious regime acting with impunity, similar to that in Saudi Arabia but with better PR. Getting rid of that regime will not happen overnight, but the cases of Latifa, Hedges, me and many others dictate that we should give the UAE no support, and the British government should take the hardest possible line in both its advice to UK nationals and its dealings with the Emiratis.

David Haigh is the former managing director of Leeds United, a lawyer, and a justice campaigner

PRESS CONFERENCE: DAUGHTER OF DUBAI RULER KIDNAPPED AT GUNPOINT BY UAE & INDIA

David Haigh announced today in a statement: Stirling Haigh will be holding a press conference on Thursday, April 12th. David Haigh, Toby Cadman, Hervé Jaubert, and Tiina Jauhiaien and her family will address the media to update the public regarding the ongoing issues surrounding the escape and subsequent capture of Sheikha Latifa Al Maktoum, daughter of the ruler of Dubai and Prime Minister of the UAE Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum. Latifa escaped the UAE along with Jauhiaien and Jaubert in late February aboard Jaubert’s yacht Nostromo, fleeing what she described as ‘years of abuse’ at the hands of her father.

On March 4th 2018, the United Arab Emirates and the Indian Coast Guard raided the American flagged yacht Nostromo in international waters, commandeered the boat, looted it, and violently apprehended all those on board, including an American citizen, a Finnish citizen, three Filipino crew members, and Sheikha Latifa (all of whom were unarmed), and took them back to the UAE against their will where they were each kept in solitary confinement and interrogated for approximately 2 weeks. Hervé Jaubert, Tiina J and the crew of Nostromo were eventually released without charge, with the warning that they must never reveal publicly anything that had occurred. The whereabouts of Sheikha Latifa remain unknown and we do not know if she is alive or dead. The fact that Latifa herself said that the UAE ‘wanted her dead’ intensifies the urgency of finding her and securing her freedom.

The actions of the UAE and India against Nostromo and those on board violated a whole host of laws and treaties to which both countries are obligated, and the ramifications from this act of aggression are as massive as they are disturbing. Furthermore, Sheikha Latifa leveled a series of extremely serious allegations against her father in a video she recorded before her escape, all of which merit a criminal investigation.

Before her capture, Sheikha Latifa instructed David Haigh to act on her behalf, and we have taken a number of steps to secure her freedom and safety. Aside from filing a missing persons report in multiple jurisdictions, raising the issue of her disappearance with UAE authorities and foreign governments, we have submitted a complaint to the United Nations Special Procedures Branch, specifically the UN Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances, the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture, Inhumane and Degrading Treatment and the UN Office of the High Commission for Human Rights requesting their urgent and immediate intervention, and we expect a response soon.

Last Friday Christian Elombo was arrested in Luxembourg after having been reported to Interpol by the UAE on charges of “kidnapping” because he acted as Latifa’s driver inside Oman when she fled the Emirates. We were concerned that Hervé and Tiina might have been similarly reported to Interpol by the UAE, which just recently contributed $50 million dollars to that organisation, and has a history of misusing it to persecute the UAE’s perceived enemies; but we are happy to report that both Hervé and Tiina have arrived safely in London, and will be present for Thursday’s conference.

We will discuss on Thursday the further steps we are taking to achieve justice in this case, including initiating legal actions, both civil and criminal, in multiple jurisdictions. We will also discuss our pending actions in response to the illegal raid on Nostromo and the abductions of those on board. The press conference will be followed by a question and answer session.

FORMER LEEDS UNITED FC CHIEF ENLISTED BY DUBAI RULERS DAUGHTER IN DARING DUBAI ESCAPE BID

David Haigh announced today in a statement: Myself and the team at Haigh International Justice, together with its pro bono associate the Legal advocacy NGO Detained were appointed earlier this year by (Princess) Sheikha Latifa Al Maktoum, daughter of the ruler of Dubai and Prime Minister of the UAE Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum to assist her in her escape from Dubai and her bid for political Asylum Princess Latifa escaped the UAE along with Jauhiaien and her crew in late February 2018 aboard the yacht Nostromo, fleeing what she described as ‘years of abuse’ at the hands of her father.

David Haigh said, “when I lived and worked in Dubai ten years ago I had various mutual friends with Princess, Latifa, including my PA”. When Latifa reached out for our help in 2018 and knowing her tragic plight was real, we swung into action and stood by her side. As we do with so many other suffering injustice and abuse in the UAE, we will support Latifa and her Crew until they achieve the freedom they deserve.

Princess Latifa was on board the US-flagged Nostromo, with her best friend Tiina Jauhiaienand the French and Pilipino crew of Nostromo. Haigh International Justice has been appointed as the exclusive advisor and media representative to all of those on the Nostromo

 

BRITISH WOMAN, 21, ARRESTED IN DUBAI FOR ‘WITNESSING FIGHT’ IN HOTEL LOBBY

A young British woman was arrested and is being detained in Dubai after witnessing a physical altercation in a hotel lobby.

Asa Hutchinson, 21, of Chelmsford, in Essex, was held by police after a group of her male friends took selfies with a man in his 50s who had fallen asleep on a sofa.

The man, reported to be a technology company executive, allegedly began punching the pranksters when he woke up, a number of whom suffered blows to their heads.

Ms. Hutchinson claims she was not present during the incident but has been charged with assault and theft and campaigners are now warning she faces the risk of jail.

She said: “The man woke up and began punching the boys. I heard the commotion and came back to see what was going on.

“He called the police and made official complaints about the boys for taking pictures of him and for being rude.”

The men had been visiting ex-pat Asa when the incident happened nearby Dusty’s bar in the DIFC district. They have since left Dubai, allegedly leading police to charge her as if she were responsible for their actions.

Asa’s mother, Lucie, said: “You always worry about your kids, especially in these Middle Eastern countries.

“There is so much on the news about the way they treat British visitors, but Asa was having a great time.

“She loved the work and made so many friends. She is a quiet, sensible girl and really is the last person to start any trouble.”

Briton Jamie Harron was recently freed in Dubai, following three-month imprisonment for touching a man’s hip.

The Standard has approached the Foreign Office for comment.

British Woman, 21, Arrested in Dubai for ‘Witnessing Fight’ in Hotel Lobby, www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/british-woman-21-arrested-in-dubai-for-witnessing-fight-in-hotel-lobby/ar-BBFUk7V?li=AAmiR2Z&MSCC=1511966174&ocid=spartanntp.                          

TOURIST FINED DH10,000 AND DEPORTED FOR ‘FILMING ABU DHABI AIRPORT SECURITY’

A tourist who was arrested for allegedly using his mobile phone while going through security at Abu Dhabi International Airport was fined Dh10,000 and will be deported.

Joseph Lee, a 59-year-old American, who was arrested in the capital before Thanksgiving will be repatriated after paying his fine, officials said.

Mr. Lee’s son, Jonathon, who was traveling with his father, said Joseph was filming his mistreatment by airport officials.

“I believe he began recording because they were treating him unfairly, in a rude manner, and in Abu Dhabi that’s a pretty big criminal offense and I believe that’s why he was detained,” Jonathan told local news agencies.

The two were transiting in Abu Dhabi for 11 hours after returning from a holiday together in Bangkok.

Jonathan told NBC they took a quick tour of the city before returning to the airport where they were separated as his father was selected for a secondary security screening.

Jonathan said he received a phone call from his father moments later telling him he had been arrested.

He said he expected his father to be released momentarily so he boarded a plane and returned home.

Taking photographs or filming in public places is not prohibited in public places in the UAE unless explicitly stated. However, it is forbidden to film or photograph critical installations and strategic and military locations, for instance, for security reasons. Taking photographs at airport security stations is prohibited across many countries.

Jonathon and his father had planned to spend Thanksgiving at his daughter’s home in Texas.

“We just want to let the UAE government know that there is no ill intent of my father and that we just want him back home. We want him back home safe and sound,” Jonathon said.

Nowais, Shireena Al. “Tourist Fined Dh10,000 and Deported for ‘Filming Abu Dhabi Airport Security’ .” The National, The National, 27 Nov. 2017, www.thenational.ae/uae/courts/tourist-fined-dh10-000-and-deported-for-filming-abu-dhabi-airport-security-1.679135.                          

AMERICAN MAN ARRESTED FOR USING CELL PHONE IN SECURITY AT ABU DHABI AIRPORT

A Plano family is desperate for information this Thanksgiving after their father was arrested thousands of miles from home.

Joseph Lee’s children say he was arrested at an airport in Abu Dhabi for one reason: he used his cell phone while going through security.

They say they haven’t heard from him since.

“I believe he began recording because they were treating him unfairly, in a rude manner, and in Abu Dhabi, that’s a pretty big criminal offense and I believe that’s why he was detained,” his son Jonathan Lee said.

Lee was with his father at the airport.

They were wrapping up a father, son trip to Bangkok, Thailand.

The Lees were on the last leg of their return home. They had an 11-hour layover in Abu Dhabi.

Jonathan says they took a quick tour of the city and when they returned to the airport, Joseph was randomly selected for a secondary security screening.

They were separated and minutes later, Jonathan says he received a phone call from Joseph telling him he was under arrest.

Jonathan says his father expected to be released momentarily so he boarded a plane and returned home.

Neither he nor his sister, Elaine Strathern, have heard from him since.

“It’s awful, absolutely awful. We just want my dad back,” Jonathan said.

“We just want our father back. He’s a very good man,” Strathern said.

The family planned to spend Thanksgiving together at Elaine’s Plano home.

Celebrating, now, is the last thing on their minds with their 59-year-old father stranded overseas.

“We just want to let the UAE government know that there is no ill intent of my father and that we just want him back home. We want him back home safe and sound,” Jonathan said tearfully.

The Lee family has created an online petition to bring awareness to their story. As of Thursday, it had been signed by nearly 500 people.

NBC 5 contacted the U.S. Embassy in Abu Dhabi. A representative said they are looking into the matter.

Yeomans, Meredith. “Family Begs for Father’s Return After UAE Airport Arrest.” NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth, NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth, 23 Nov. 2017, www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/Man-Arrested-for-Using-Cell-Phone-in-Security-at-Abu-Dhabi-Airport-459458793.html.                          

LESMAHAGOW GRANDFATHER WILL NOT BE EXTRADITED TO UAE

A retired businessman has won his fight against extradition to the UAE after he faced being deported for helping his daughter escape her troubled marriage there.

The grandfather, of Lesmahagow, Lanarkshire, faced torture if he was sent back.

He left his whole life, including his business, behind when he left after five years in October 2010 to help his daughter escape the violent marriage.

He suffers from chronic asbestosis and has struggled to rebuild his life in Scotland ever since his return.

His former son-in-law, Saeed Al Mehri, 45, accused him of a ‘breach of trust’ after he realized there was no hope of reigniting his relationship with Sharon, or her daughter, eight.

The UAE then reported the case to Interpol and has been trying to get him extradited there since 2013.

Today the extradition request was finally turned down at a court hearing at Edinburgh Sheriff Court.

Speaking at the hearing, Sheriff Thomas Welsh said there was a risk he is tortured if he was sent back for the potential one-year prison sentence.

He is believed to be the first attempted extradition to the UAE from Scotland.

Following the hearing, Mr. Black said he was relieved but exhausted: ‘I am feeling great and very relieved.

‘It was a very strong judgment against the extradition from the Sheriff.

‘It’s just been hearing after hearing, I think I have had 20 or more, plus eight full days of court – it’s been exhausting.’

Mr. Black employed his former son-in-law as a local representative for his international logistics business in Dubai to use his ‘local influence’ to help with the company.

But Mr. Al Mehri reportedly began drinking heavily and acting abusively, the hearing was told.

Mr. Black’s daughter Sharon then decided to leave the UAE permanently with their daughter, Alya Black, eight, and return to Scotland.

It is believed Mr. Al Mehri then fabricated the ‘breach of trust’ allegations in a bid to force his wife and child back to the Emirates.

Mr. Black added today said: ‘This has been a very scary experience for my family.

In 2010, when I came back to Scotland it was clear Saeed was very angry we had got out, but he still hoped and tried to reconcile his relationship with my daughter.

‘In 2011, my daughter, against my better judgment, decided it was unfair for her to not allow her daughter to have a relationship with Saeed.

‘So he came over here to Scotland to visit us, and then again in 2012.

‘He became very anxious to get my granddaughters passport back to the UAE for renewal, and it was at that point Sharon told him Alya was a British citizen now.

‘He realized there was no chance they were going to reignite their relationship.

‘And in 2013, after my daughter received a lot of threats from him, out of the blue this case came against me.’

Mr. Al Mehri accused Mr. Black of stealing a share of the businesses, which Mr. Black branded as ‘laughable’ and a ‘total joke’.

He said: ‘Saeed along with his brother, who is a chief prosecutor, convicted me of this breach of trust, in my absence, and then tried to go for extradition.

‘It was all a complete fabrication and utter nonsense.’

Mr. Black was then convicted of a £250,000 embezzlement – despite him not being in the country at the time.

David Haigh, managing partner of law firm Haigh International Justice testified earlier on in the extradition hearing.

Mr. Haigh, who is a former managing director of Leeds United Football Club, spoke of his own personal experience with the UAE legal system after he was wrongly imprisoned himself.

He said: ‘The UAE is increasingly using Interpol for frivolous cases that do not even fall under its mandate.

‘Interpol is not an instrument to be used in private disputes, yet the UAE frequently reports non-criminal matters such as debt defaults and bounced cheques.

‘Mr. Black’s case is particularly alarming because not only is it a private matter, but the motive behind it is essentially a personal grudge.’

If Mr. Black were to have been extradited, given the personal nature of the case, and the family connections and influence of his former son-in-law, he would be in danger of serious violations of his human rights.’

‘It appears that the goal of this case was to force Mr. Black’s daughter to return to the UAE, and the case was being used as leverage to coerce her capitulation.

The cost of UAE extradition requests is high, estimated to be in the millions per year – with prosecutors acting on behalf of the UAE at the UK taxpayer’s cost.

There are court costs, prosecuting counsel and defense counsel costs, usually covered by legal aid.

Robin, Klopa. “Lesmahagow Grandfather Will Not Be Extradited to UAE.” DeathRattleSports.com, 18 Nov. 2017, deathrattlesports.com/lesmahagow-grandfather-will-not-be-extradited-to-uae/168841.

TESTIMONY BY DAVID HAIGH HALTS UAE EXTRADITION REQUEST OF EDINBURGH BUS DRIVER GARNETT BLACK

Gary Black, from Lesmahagow, was facing 12 months in prison for an alleged “breach of trust”.

At a hearing at Edinburgh Sheriff Court, it was ruled that his human rights were at risk.

The 64-year-old was wanted over embezzlement charges which he said were invented by his former son-in-law.

The hearing took place on 17 November in Edinburgh, after a request was made to extradite Mr. Black to the Middle Eastern country in 2013 after he was convicted in absentia of a £250,000 embezzlement.

But the court ruled that there was a high chance he would be denied his human rights in jail. It is believed to be the first attempted extradition to the UAE from Scotland.

In his judgment, Sheriff Thomas Welsh said there was a “real risk that if he is returned he will be subjected to torture, inhumane or degrading treatment”.

“Ahmad Zeidan: British Student Released from UAE Prison.” BBC News, BBC, 16 Nov. 2017, www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-berkshire-42008678.

AHMAD ZEIDAN: BRITISH STUDENT RELEASED FROM UAE PRISON

A British student has been freed from jail in the United Arab Emirates after a three-year campaign for his release.

Ahmad Zeidan was imprisoned in 2014 after 0.04g of cocaine was found in a car in which he was a passenger. He always claimed he was innocent.

His father Manal said his son was freed after a £4,000 fine was paid and added: “We are overjoyed… he is finally free and still can’t believe it’s real.”

The Foreign Office said it “assisted” during Zeidan’s detention and release.

Mr. Zeidan said his son has now left UAE and “wants to restart his education” after “recovering from his ordeal”.

Zeidan, now 23 and formerly from Reading, was studying at Emirates Aviation College when he was arrested. He claims he was tortured into admitting drug charges. All the local men in the car were given pardons, but Zeidan was jailed in a Sharjah prison.

His family enlisted the help of human rights charity Reprieve and appealed to the Foreign Office to intervene, which led to a bilateral meeting between the British and UAE governments in March 2016.

When these came to nothing the student went on a three-day hunger strike, and unsuccessfully appealed for a royal pardon.

But following a high court appeal and a change in UAE drug laws, his sentence was reduced to seven years on 4 October.

His father told the BBC the family then hired another lawyer who successfully appealed for a further sentence reduction to five years, “most of which [Ahmad] had already served in detention”.

He added: “He could be released if a fine of approximately £4000 was paid. This was raised and he was freed immediately.”

Mr. Zeidan said media coverage of his son’s case was “the only ray of light that kept both his story and motivation alive while he was being held prisoner for years”.

“[Ahmad] is still fragile and needs rest and recuperation to overcome past seizures he suffered while in captivity,” he said.

“Nothing can compensate for the material and emotional loss that he has endured.”

A Foreign Office spokesman said: “Our staff assisted a British man and his family during his detention and subsequent release in the UAE.”

“Ahmad Zeidan: British Student Released from UAE Prison.” BBC News, BBC, 16 Nov. 2017, www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-berkshire-42008678.