UAE jails women for having been raped


The ‘new’ Afghanistan of George W. Bush (and now of Obama) is not the only country jailing women for having been raped.

Don’t Get Raped In Dubai. You WILL Do Jail Time. Ms. Marte Deborah Dalelv Tells Her Story: here.

At the BBC site we can read about the United Arab Emirates, another ally of the Pentagon (and of the Australian government, doing its bit in the Pentagon’s wars):

7 June 2011 Last updated at 11:49 GMT

Jailed Australian sues over bad consular advice in UAE

An Australian woman is suing her country’s government for allegedly giving her bad advice when she was in trouble abroad.

The hotel worker was jailed in the UAE after reporting she had been raped by fellow employees.

The complainant says Australian consular officials failed to warn her that she could be jailed for adultery if she reported the alleged assault.

She spent eight months in prison for adultery and drinking without a permit.

The 29-year-old woman says she was drugged and raped by work colleagues at the hotel in the Emirate of Fujairah in 2008.

She contacted her consulate for help, and says she received no warning from officials about the risks of making a complaint.

After reporting the incident to police, she was imprisoned until her pardon in March 2009. It is illegal to have sexual relations outside marriage in the UAE.

Now she has filed a lawsuit in Brisbane Supreme Court.

“The Embassy’s deficient advice led to this woman spending a hellish eight months in prison,” said her lawyer, Michelle James, in a statement.

“She was not told she could be jailed for reporting a sexual assault. If she had known that, she would not have reported the assault and would have tried to leave the country immediately.”

The Australian Department of Foreign Affairs said it will contest the claim, but declined to comment further.

The complainant is also suing her employers at the hotel, alleging they failed to protect her.

Police in Dubai have rejected a French businesswoman’s allegation that she was gang-raped by three local men, and instead charged her with having “adulterous sexual relations”, a crime which carries a maximum 18-month jail sentence under the Muslim emirate’s Sharia law: here.

OK, there is one difference between the UAE and another dictatorial Pentagon ally, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia: in the UAE, there is no driving ban for women.

However, there is a ban on women wearing trousers.

From The National daily in the UAE:

Cross-dressing women targeted in Dubai campaign

Awad Mustafa and Rym Ghazal

Jun 1, 2011

DUBAI: Police are launching a campaign against cross-dressing women.

The Government says boyat – loosely translated as tomboys – are indulging in a dangerous practice.

Officials from the police and the Community Development Authority said yesterday they would work together on plans to combat boyat.

“The security awareness administration at Dubai Police is currently planning the launch of campaigns targeting transsexuals, boyat, domestic violence and sexual harassment,” police said in a statement.

Fears about boyat first surfaced in 2008, when Dubai Police called on the Government to carry out research into the trend.

Lt Gen Dahi Khalfan Tamim, the chief of Dubai Police, at the time denounced the practice, blaming co-educational schooling and calling on the Ministry of Social Affairs to determine the cause and extent of the problem.

Major Mohammed al Muhairi, the director of the criminal awareness department at Dubai Police, said yesterday: “The important issue is that along with the launch of the campaign, warnings have to be set for such activities and clear punishments have to be put in place.

“We are also collecting data on sexual harassment cases against youths to identify who are the most victimised, and then campaigning to them and raising their awareness to their rights.

“The campaigns will target youths and be divided into four segments covering transsexuality, boyat, broken families and sexual harassment. We are co-ordinating with the Ministry of Social Affairs and will be launching it soon.”

Boyat met news of the campaign with indifference. They said they were already the target of similar efforts on school campuses and elsewhere in public.

“I didn’t become a boyah because of something at school or because I met a boyah in a social gathering,” said a 20-year-old Emirati woman, who declined to be identified by anything more than a nickname, Kool Boyah. “I am a boyah because of what happened at home.”

Universities and radio and TV programmes regularly discuss this subculture, often saying parents are not involved enough with their daughters as they hit their turbulent teenage years.

“We are stigmatised and misunderstood,” Kool Boyah said, adding she was abused by a male relative as a child. “I wanted to be tough and appear so through my choice of tomboyish clothes and attitude.”

Boyat often wear masculine attire under their the abaya and shayla in public.

The phenomenon is also found in other Gulf states, with blogs, websites, online discussion groups and Facebook groups devoted to the movement.

Dr Alia Ibrahim, a family counsellor and life coach who has studied the issue, said “the reasons for the development of such behaviour are to rebel or to stand out, or even to change their identity”.

Misguided sexual orientation, social differentiations between males and females, multiple marriages of the father and sexual assaults or harassment also contributed, Dr Ibrahim said.

According to Islamic tradition, it is forbidden for men and women to act like the opposite sex. Such behaviour is considered a deviance from God’s plan and from nature.

“Men likening themselves to women and women to men, whether in clothing or the way they talk, walk or in their demeanour and appearance, is despised by any person whose nature has not been corrupted,” a Friday sermon warned last year.

Boyat, also in Qatar: here.

A Conversation With Saudi Women’s Rights Campaigner Wajeha al-Huwaider | The Nation: here.

Free Speech under attack in UAE: here.

39 thoughts on “UAE jails women for having been raped

  1. Pingback: Indonesian woman worker on Saudi death row | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  2. Administrator on June 9, 2011 at 3:58 pm said:

    Special Report: Qatar’s big Libya adventure

    By Dmitry Zhdannikov, Regan E. Doherty and Mohammed Abbas

    BENGHAZI, Libya | Thu Jun 9, 2011 8:29am EDT

    (Reuters) – To get an idea of who might wield influence in post-civil war Libya, take a look at the flags flying in the rebel-held east of the country.

    Outside the courthouse in Benghazi — rebel headquarters and symbolic heart of the uprising against the 41-year rule of leader Muammar Gaddafi — fly the flags of France, Great Britain, the United States, the European Union, NATO. There’s one other flag, too: Qatar’s.

    “Qatar, really, it’s time to convey our gratitude to them,” Abdulla Shamia, rebel economy chief, told Reuters. “They really helped us a lot. It’s a channel for transportation, for help, for everything.”

    It has a population of just 1.7 million people, but the wealthy Gulf monarchy has long sought a major voice in political affairs in the region. It has brokered peace talks in Sudan and Lebanon, owns the influential pan-Arab news network Al Jazeera, and recently won the right to host the 2022 soccer World Cup. Now the gas-rich nation has placed a big geopolitical bet in Libya, splashing out hundreds of millions of dollars on fuel, food and cash transfers for the rebels.

    A representative from the Emir’s palace declined to comment on what products Qatar has delivered to Libya, and on the ruling family’s motivations behind its Libyan engagement.

    t’s certainly a gamble. If the rebels win, Qatar is likely to pick up energy deals and new influence in North Africa. But if they lose, Qatar’s ambitions may further alienate it among its neighbors.

    “I guess ever since the late 1990s, Qatar has been trying to break the Saudi-dominated status quo and carve out a niche position,” said Saket Vemprala from the London-based Business Monitor International consultancy.

    “At the moment I think it’s more geopolitical, they want to broaden their (influence in the) region and become a more significant player … And it certainly makes it easy for them to portray themselves as being on the right side of history,” he said.

    That sentiment is on display on a huge billboard in front of the courthouse. Over a picture of Qatari ruler Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani reads the promise: “Qatar, history will always remember your support for our cause.”

    “‘WE ARE FINE’”

    Being on the right side of history doesn’t come cheap.

    Qatar was the first Arab country to contribute planes to police the U.N.-backed no-fly zone over Libya. Simultaneously, hundreds of millions of dollars began to flow from the Qatari capital Doha to Benghazi from early March.

    While international oil traders pondered whether to brave the bombs and international sanctions to start buying oil from the rebels, Qatar was quick to throw a lifeline and help eastern Libya meet its most pressing needs including fuel, food, medicines and telecommunications equipment.

    Qatar’s foreign ministry has confirmed that it has shipped four tankers full of gasoline, diesel and other refined fuels to Benghazi, which specialists estimate is enough to feed the large Benghazi power plant for one or two weeks.

    But people on the ground in Benghazi say they believe Qatar is behind much of the continuing delivery of fuel supplies, as well as food, medicine and cash payments. Given that oil production in the east has stalled and the economy generates no cash, they ask, where else are all the supplies coming from?

    Overall, the Qatari shipments have covered 100 percent of eastern Libya energy needs for a month and a half, Salah Fouad, a rebel oil engineer based in the eastern coastal city of Tobruk, said in May. “We are receiving a huge help from Qatar. Its role in unforgettable. Even the little child knows Qatar’s role and assistance to us,” he said.

    A western consultant who worked in Benghazi in March and April supported this view. “You ask port workers how are they doing today and they say, ‘Oh, we are fine. We just received aid from Qatar,’” he said, declining to be named because of the sensitivity of his mission. “You ask the council what’s the situation with diesel and they say, ‘Oh we are just fine, we’ve got new deliveries from Qatar.’ You tell Libyan officials to let you know if something goes wrong with power facilities and they tell you, ‘Oh we are just fine, Qatar is helping us.’”

    A Gulf-based oil trader with knowledge of Qatari gasoline deliveries estimated monthly requirements at 10 gasoline and 5-6 diesel cargoes a month to help run vehicles and Benghazi’s huge power plant.

    As shipments are being settled on a government-to-government basis, they are usually not followed by satellite tracking systems, which monitor mostly commercial shipments.

    Those commercial shipments have included a test-case export cargo from the rebel-held east, shipped out in early May by trading house Vitol. Some traders say Qatar has gone further.

    “Everyone gets excited about one Vitol cargo and doesn’t see a fleet of Qatari tankers,” said another London-based trader.

    Other countries are helping the rebels as well, of course. An anti-Gaddafi coalition called the Libya contact group, including the United States, France, Britain and Italy — as well as Kuwait and Jordan — agreed in May to set up a fund to help them; Washington pledged to unlock some of the $30 billion of Libyan state funds frozen in the United States.

    What makes Qatar different is the breadth and depth of its aid.

    Rebel officials in Doha say Qatari banks are helping facilitate international money transfers in rebel-held areas to recapitalize the paralyzed banking system, though they won’t say which banks.

    Qatar is also believed by diplomatic sources in Doha to have granted some Libyans working for Qatari companies leave of absence so they can contribute to the war effort.

    Several western and Doha-based diplomatic sources say Qatar is even supplying the rebels arms, including possibly Milan anti-tank missiles. The Gulf state declined to comment on whether it has supplied the rebels with arms, or in what quantity.

    In May, the rebels estimated they urgently needed $2-3 billion in cash. When the anti-Gaddafi coalition set up its fund, Qatar immediately pledged the largest sum of $400-$500 million.

    IMMENSE WEALTH

    What’s behind Qatar’s generosity? It helps that it is so rich. Qatar’s copious gas reserves have made it one of the world’s wealthiest countries, with a sky-high gross domestic product per person of $88,000 according to the International Monetary Fund. Its $60-billion plus sovereign wealth fund owns stakes in banks Credit Suisse and Barclays, as well as London’s iconic department store Harrods.

    “Qatar will soon — literally — have more money than it knows what to do with,” according to a 2008 U.S. diplomatic cable, obtained by WikiLeaks and reviewed by Reuters.

    The largesse in Libya is part investment, part strategic. “They are looking to park investments around the world. They helped the Lebanon peace process, Yemen, they got the World Cup, Doha talks, Al Jazeera — these are all parts of a very big diplomatic game and a fight for influence,” says a London-based British diplomat.

    The big prize is energy. Libya produced 1.6 million barrels of oil per day before the war, or almost 2 percent of world output, and has enough reserves to sustain that level of production for 77 years, according to BP. Qatar would like to control a chunk of that oil supply as well as potentially large Libyan gas exports to Europe which otherwise would effectively rival Qatar’s own deliveries.

    Although gas markets have faced a severe glut in the past few years, the outlook is improving fast, especially in the aftermath of Japan’s Fukushima disaster and the decision by Germany to phase out nuclear power.

    “Qatar is putting energy at the forefront of its diplomacy. Libya brings them closer to Europe and to their future markets. They will be right on the Mediterranean,” said the British diplomat.

    With direct access to Europe, Qatar would be in a position to carve up the gas markets between itself and Russia, with which Doha enjoys increasingly friendly ties.

    There’s also Libya’s sovereign wealth fund (LIA), which has some $70 billion worth of assets frozen around the world. The LIA owns stakes in Italian bank UniCredit, defense company Finmeccanica, British publisher Pearson which owns the Financial Times, and Belgian financial group Fortis, now known as Ageas.

    If the rebels win, Qatar would have a say in what the LIA does with its investments.

    “Libya is not Iraq. You are unlikely to have a protracted civil war once it is over,” said the western risk consultant who worked in Benghazi. “So those investments are not like putting money at the bottom of a pit. It should pay back and also possibly give Qatar influence on what the LIA can invest money in. If we use takeover terminology, Qatar is exploring unrealized value.”

    The Qataris see such rich pickings they have recently turned down opportunities elsewhere, according to a source close to the Qatar Investment Authority (QIA), the country’s sovereign wealth fund. “Qatar’s leaders are intensely focused on sorting out the crisis in Libya, to the extent that they have passed on a few items over the past few months.”

    THE EMIR OF WHERE?

    A popular joke in Benghazi illustrates Qatari ambitions in Libya perfectly. What’s the new nickname of Qatari ruler Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani? The Emir of Qatar and Libya.

    So why is an absolute monarchy, with little time for democracy at home, mixed up with a democratic rebellion?

    Qatar’s foreign ministry has cited the U.N. resolution and the emir’s desire to alleviate the suffering of the Libyan people.

    “The reasons as laid out as to why Qatar is acting do not quite seem to account for the huge risks and extraordinarily bold actions that Qatar is taking,” said David Roberts, deputy director of the Royal United Services Institute based in Doha. “I can only account for this apparent discrepancy by suggesting that this policy is being heavily pushed by Qatar’s elite.”

    Rumors abound in Doha that the real reason for Qatar’s interest in Libya is that al-Thani’s wife Sheikha Mozah has close personal ties there, although her representatives declined to comment.

    “Most of Qatar’s leadership, the al-Thanis and the sheikhs, know Libya very well, because they went to school with Libyans in the U.S. and the UK in the 70s and 80s,” said Mahmoud Shammam, Doha-based spokesman for the rebels. “So they know the situation there very well. They know the ugliness of the regime.”

    MORE THAN U.S. PROXY

    Could Qatar also be working for Washington? Before the war, U.S. companies had large investments in Libya, with majors ConocoPhillips and Marathon involved in direct production deals with Gaddafi’s Libyan National Oil Co. Now consultants and deal-brokers in Benghazi are struck by the low numbers of American fixers relative to their European peers.

    “To some extent they may be acting as a U.S. proxy. Washington wants to achieve things but doesn’t want to do it with its own hands,” said a London-based risk consultant who has European firms as clients.

    Qatar hosts a large U.S. military base; its decision to contribute planes to police the no-fly zone over Libya helped Washington argue that the western-led air strikes had Arab support. Its importance there was underscored by its ruler’s visit to Washington in April.

    “We would not have been able, I think, to shape the kind of broad-based international coalition that includes not only our NATO members but also includes Arab states, without the emir’s leadership,” President Barack Obama told reporters that month after meeting the emir in the Oval office.

    Diplomats also point to strains in U.S.-Saudi relations as proof of — or perhaps even reason for — improved ties between Washington and Qatar, pointing to events in Bahrain where U.S. calls for negotiation to end a recent uprising stood in stark contrast to Saudi Arabia’s decision to send in troops.

    Qatar’s stand is certainly appreciated by European countries, whose diplomats argue that the emirate is playing a smart multi-polar game. “The Qataris are replacing the Saudis on certain agendas,” said a French diplomat based in Europe.

    Qatar’s emir has twice been guest of honor at France’s annual Bastille Day parade since 2007 and the emirate has stakes in Airbus parent EADS, energy group EDF and construction firm Vinci. In 2008, France also passed a law granting special tax exemptions to the emir and other Qatari investors who had bought property in Paris.

    BLOW TO QATARI RISK PROFILE

    Despite wide-ranging support in the West, Qatar’s actions in Libya have created unease among its neighbors.

    Qatar has long played the role of intermediary in the region. Though it is close to Washington and Saudi Arabia, it also has ties to Iran.

    Foreign firms, including almost all the world’s major oil companies, have invested tens of billions of dollars in projects with Qatar even though they know its gas reserves are, in effect, shared with Iran. The Iranian part is the South Pars field while the Qatari part is known as the North Field.

    The country’s Libya adventure increases the hazards again. “The Qatari risk profile is changing significantly now due to Libya, whereas before they had been simply viewed as a stable and wealthy partner,” the London-based British diplomat said. “No doubt that foreign majors are taking notice of that.”

    (Dmitry Zhdannikov reported from London, Regan E. Doherty from Doha and Mohammed Abbas from Benghazi; Additional reporting by Emma Farge in London, Sherine El Madany in Benghazi and Humeyra Pamuk in Dubai; editing by Simon Robinson and Sara Ledwith)

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  3. Administrator on July 13, 2011 at 12:09 pm said:

    Pinay maid found hanging in employers’ home in UAE

    07/12/2011 | 02:23 PM

    Police in the United Arab Emirates are looking into the death of a Filipino housemaid found hanging inside the house of her employers in the Ajman area Monday, a report said Tuesday.

    The employers of the 28-year-old Filipina claimed the maid committed suicide, news site Khaleej Times reported.

    The employers wondered why she had to commit suicide “after treating the Filipina well,” the report said. The victim is survived by her two children and disabled husband.

    The Filipina’s employers also narrated they had asked her to accompany them to visit a relative. They said she entered the bathroom and did not come out after more than an hour.

    When they opened the door to ask her to hurry, they could not find her, according to them, adding that they later found the maid hanging from a cord attached to the balcony’s ceiling.

    The employers said they cut the cord and contacted the police, who rushed the maid to the hospital. However, she died before reaching the hospital.

    On the other hand, the Khaleej Times report quoted the maid’s agency as saying the maid overheard the woman of the house and her son talking about overspending.

    The report said the maid thought of running away because she may have thought the family was accusing her of theft.

    No foul play

    Meanwhile, UAE police said they found no foul play in the death of a Filipina saleswoman who hanged herself in her apartment in Abu Shaghara last June, Khaleej Times reported earlier this week.

    The 25-year-old Filipina had been found hanging from the ceiling of the balcony of her apartment last June 25.

    Close relatives said the woman had been suffering from depression due to “personal problems.” the report said.

    The Khaleej Times report did not name the woman, but described her as a saleswoman of a company selling ready-to-wear clothes in Sharjah.

    Investigation showed the woman used a plastic cord to hang herself, according to the report. — JE, GMA News

    http://www.gmanews.tv/story/225993/pinoy-abroad/pinay-maid-found-hanging-in-employers-home-in-uae

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  18. Cross-dressing beggar arrested in Saudi Arabia

    210 beggars held in Dammam during Ramadan

    By Habib Toumi Bureau Chief

    Published: 12:25 August 19, 2013

    Manama: A man who cross-dressed to beg for money is being investigated by the Saudi authorities.

    The man was arrested at a major road intersection in the Dammam area in the Eastern Province of the kingdom, local Arabic daily Al Sharq reported on Monday. Dammam, Khobar and Dhahran are the major cities in the province.

    Begging is prohibited in Saudi Arabia, but the authorities have regularly to deal with people, mainly women or men dressed as women, who ask for money in front of mosques.

    Ramadan, the month of fasting and benevolent actions, is often used by beggars to increase their activities. The authorities said that they arrested 210 beggars in Dammam throughout the sacred month that ended 12 days ago. “The arrests included 107 women, 30 men and 73 children,” officials told the Saudi daily. “We have found out that the percentage of Saudi nationals were 27 per cent while foreigners made up the remaining 73 per cent,” they said.

    Most of the arrests were made in front of mosques and at traffic signals and in major markets. Saudi nationals who are caught begging are transferred to dedicated social centres for follow up while foreigners are moved to the directorate of expatriates, usually to be deported.

    http://gulfnews.com/news/gulf/saudi-arabia/cross-dressing-beggar-arrested-in-saudi-arabia-1.1221871

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