British man detained in UAE
Friends of the British soccer fan arrested and detained in the United Arab Emirates have predicted on the Gulf nation's authorities to let him return home safely into the UK later officials indicated he beat up himself.
He wore a Qatar shirt into the game oblivious that doing anything which may be interpreted as promoting Qatar from the UAE is an offence punishable with a massive fine and an elongated period of imprisonment.
He was afterwards arrested and detained by the UAE government . He had been permitted to make 1 telephone call and at a desperate state contacted a British buddy Amer Lokie.
He advised Lokie he was detained and defeated after the game and accused of boosting Qatar by wearing a soccer shirt bearing the Qatar emblem. He explained that when he moved to report the attack he had been held over claims he had made false allegations about safety officers.
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Originally, the UAE embassy told the Guardian that it was investigating the conditions of the arrest. But following other press picked up the narrative it issued a further statement stating that Ahmad went into the police station at the emirate of Sharjah a month claiming he was harassed and beaten up from UAE national soccer supporters for cheering the Qatar team in the Asian Cup.
A UAE official stated:"The authorities took him to hospital where a doctor who examined himconcluded that his injuries were inconsistent with his own accounts of events and seemed to become self-inflicted. We're advised he has acknowledged those offences and will be processed via the UAE courts"
The official added:"He had been not detained for wearing a Qatar soccer shirt. This is rather an example of a individual looking for media attention and wasting time."
Lokie stated:"There is not any way that Ali could have conquered up himself and then moved into the police station seeking media attention. As soon as I talked to him about the phone he seemed in a terrible condition and he had been asking us to get him introduced out of UAE and securely back to the United Kingdom. We're attempting to elevate the profile of the situation in the hope it will cause his release and return to the United Kingdom."
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The FCO site in its own section containing advice for travelers into the UAE warns:"The UAE government declared on 7 June 2017 that revealing sympathy for Qatar on societal networking or from any other way of communicating is an offence. Offenders may be imprisoned and subject to a significant fine."
The sanctions for"boosting" Qatar are connected to the breaking of diplomatic relations between both nations in May 2017. The UAE accused Qatar of undermining stability and security in the region by hosting and funding terrorist groups.
An FCO spokesperson stated:"We're providing help to a British man detained in the UAE and have been in contact with the regional authorities."
David Haigh a former managing director of Leeds United FC and creator of campaigning group Detained International, that was himself arrested UAE, called about the foreign secretary, Jeremy Hunt, also FCO officials to"act quickly and demanding".
Radha Stirling of this campaign team Detained at Dubai explained:"Due to the restricted communication enabled by the UAE to people in custody, the specific details of what happened to Ali Issa Ahmad stay vague... What we understand is that the UAE does prosecute anybody who expresses sympathy for Qatar in any manner."
She added that when Ahmad was made to recant the allegations he made to the authorities and was currently being penalized for having reported them at the first place, it had been"extremely concerning".
He wore a Qatar shirt into the game oblivious that doing anything which may be interpreted as promoting Qatar from the UAE is an offence punishable with a massive fine and an elongated period of imprisonment.
He was afterwards arrested and detained by the UAE government . He had been permitted to make 1 telephone call and at a desperate state contacted a British buddy Amer Lokie.
He advised Lokie he was detained and defeated after the game and accused of boosting Qatar by wearing a soccer shirt bearing the Qatar emblem. He explained that when he moved to report the attack he had been held over claims he had made false allegations about safety officers.
http://betterlivingsunrooms.com/About-Betterliving-Sunrooms-by-Craft-Bilt/Andys-Blog/May-2016/What%E2%80%99s-new-with-Betterliving.aspx?saved=1
https://www.happy-diwali.co.in/2018/08/sample.html?showComment=1549478364963#c770492166626015435
http://www.articles.kraftloft.com/Articles-of-2019/toronto-dominion-bank-routing-numbers
Originally, the UAE embassy told the Guardian that it was investigating the conditions of the arrest. But following other press picked up the narrative it issued a further statement stating that Ahmad went into the police station at the emirate of Sharjah a month claiming he was harassed and beaten up from UAE national soccer supporters for cheering the Qatar team in the Asian Cup.
A UAE official stated:"The authorities took him to hospital where a doctor who examined himconcluded that his injuries were inconsistent with his own accounts of events and seemed to become self-inflicted. We're advised he has acknowledged those offences and will be processed via the UAE courts"
The official added:"He had been not detained for wearing a Qatar soccer shirt. This is rather an example of a individual looking for media attention and wasting time."
Lokie stated:"There is not any way that Ali could have conquered up himself and then moved into the police station seeking media attention. As soon as I talked to him about the phone he seemed in a terrible condition and he had been asking us to get him introduced out of UAE and securely back to the United Kingdom. We're attempting to elevate the profile of the situation in the hope it will cause his release and return to the United Kingdom."
http://songvault.fm/artists/zaid_azan.htm
http://www.webestools.com/profile-85309.html
http://www.mytierack.com/humor/cubicle-pranks-25-photos/#idc-cover
The FCO site in its own section containing advice for travelers into the UAE warns:"The UAE government declared on 7 June 2017 that revealing sympathy for Qatar on societal networking or from any other way of communicating is an offence. Offenders may be imprisoned and subject to a significant fine."
The sanctions for"boosting" Qatar are connected to the breaking of diplomatic relations between both nations in May 2017. The UAE accused Qatar of undermining stability and security in the region by hosting and funding terrorist groups.
An FCO spokesperson stated:"We're providing help to a British man detained in the UAE and have been in contact with the regional authorities."
David Haigh a former managing director of Leeds United FC and creator of campaigning group Detained International, that was himself arrested UAE, called about the foreign secretary, Jeremy Hunt, also FCO officials to"act quickly and demanding".
Radha Stirling of this campaign team Detained at Dubai explained:"Due to the restricted communication enabled by the UAE to people in custody, the specific details of what happened to Ali Issa Ahmad stay vague... What we understand is that the UAE does prosecute anybody who expresses sympathy for Qatar in any manner."
She added that when Ahmad was made to recant the allegations he made to the authorities and was currently being penalized for having reported them at the first place, it had been"extremely concerning".
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