'Hostage' Ordeal Of Dubai Ruler's Daughter Revealed
The daughter of Dubai's ruler who tried to flee the country in 2018 later sent secret video messages to friends accusing her father of holding her "hostage" as she feared for her life.
In footage
shared with BBC Panorama, Princess Latifa Al Maktoum says commandos drugged her
as she fled by boat and flew her back to detention.
The secret
messages have stopped - and friends are urging the UN to step in.
Dubai and
the UAE have previously said she is safe in the care of family.
Ex-UN rights
envoy Mary Robinson, who had described Latifa as a "troubled young
woman" after meeting her in 2018, now says she was "horribly
tricked" by the princess's family.
The former
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and president of Ireland has joined calls
for international action to establish Latifa's current condition and
whereabouts.
"I
continue to be very worried about Latifa. Things have moved on. And so I think
it should be investigated," she said.
Latifa's
father, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, is one of the richest heads of
state in the world, the ruler of Dubai and vice-president of the United Arab
Emirates (UAE).
The videos
were recorded over several months on a phone Latifa was secretly given about a
year after her capture and return to Dubai. She recorded them in a bathroom as
it had the only door she could lock.
In the
messages, she detailed how:
she fought
back against the soldiers taking her off the boat, "kicking and
fighting" and biting one Emirati commando's arm until he screamed
after being
tranquillised she lost consciousness as she was being carried on to a private
jet, and didn't wake up until it landed in Dubai
she was
being held alone without access to medical or legal help in a villa with
windows and doors barred shut, and guarded by police
Latifa's
account of her capture and detention was revealed to Panorama by her close
friend Tiina Jauhiainen, maternal cousin Marcus Essabri and campaigner David
Haigh, who are all behind the Free Latifa campaign.
They say
they have taken the difficult decision to release the messages now out of
concern for Latifa's safety.
It was they
who managed to establish contact with Latifa as she was held in a Dubai
"villa", which she said had barred windows and police guards.
Panorama has
independently verified the details of where Latifa was held.
Sheikh
Mohammed has built a hugely successful city but rights activists say there is
no tolerance of dissent and the judicial system can discriminate against women.
He has a
vast horse-racing enterprise and frequently attends major events such as Royal
Ascot, where he has been pictured with Queen Elizabeth II.
But he has
faced severe criticism over Princess Latifa and also her stepmother, Princess
Haya Bint Al Hussain, who fled to London in 2019 with her two children.
Latifa, now
35, first tried to flee at 16 but it was only after contacting French
businessman Herve Jaubert in 2011 that a long-planned escape was put into
motion. This was done with the help of Ms Jauhiainen, initially her instructor
for capoeira, a Brazilian martial art.
On 24
February 2018, Latifa and Ms Jauhiainen took an inflatable boat and jet ski to
international waters, where Mr Jaubert was waiting in a US flagged yacht.
But eight
days later, off India, the boat was boarded by commandos. Ms Jauhiainen says
smoke grenades forced her and Latifa out of hiding in the bathroom below deck
and they were held at gunpoint.
Latifa was
returned to Dubai, and hadn't been heard from since until now.
Ms
Jauhiainen and the crew on the boat were freed after two weeks of detention in
Dubai. The Indian government has never commented on its role.
Before her
2018 escape attempt, Latifa recorded another video which was posted on YouTube
after her capture. "If you are watching this video, it's not such a good
thing, either I'm dead or I'm in a very, very, very bad situation," she
said.
It was this
that sparked huge international concern and calls for her release. The UAE came
under intense pressure to account for her and a meeting was arranged with Ms
Robinson.
She flew to
Dubai in December 2018 at the request of her friend, Princess Haya, for a lunch
at which Latifa was also present.
Ms Robinson
told Panorama she and Princess Haya had earlier been presented with details of
Latifa's bipolar disorder, a condition she does not have.
She said she
did not ask Latifa about her situation because she did not want to
"increase the trauma" of Latifa's "condition".
Nine days
after the lunch, the UAE's foreign ministry published photographs of Ms
Robinson with Latifa, which it said was proof that the princess was safe and
well.
Ms Robinson
said: "I was particularly tricked when the photographs went public. That
was a total surprise... I was absolutely stunned."
In 2019, the
tensions within Dubai's ruling family were laid bare before England's High
Court after one of the sheikh's wives, Princess Haya, fled to the UK with two
of her children and applied for a protection order and non-molestation order
against the sheikh.
Last year,
the High Court issued a series of fact-finding judgments that said
Sheikh Mohammed had ordered and orchestrated the forcible return of Latifa in
2002 and 2018, as well as the unlawful abduction from the UK in 2000 of her
older sister Princess Shamsa, who had also tried to escape.
The court
found Sheikh Mohammed "continues to maintain a regime whereby both these
two young women are deprived of their liberty".
Latifa's
friends had hoped that the court case in March last year that ruled against
Sheikh Mohammed, calling him "not honest" and in favour of Princess
Haya, might help.
On the
decision to release the messages now, Ms Jauhiainen just says that "a lot
of time has passed" since contact was lost.
She says she
thought hard about releasing the video messages now, but adds: "I feel
that she would want us to fight for her, and not give up."
The
governments of Dubai and the UAE have failed to respond to requests for comment
from the BBC about Latifa's current condition.
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