'We have a simple solution': Lawyer for locked up Dubai princess Sheikha Latifa pushes for her release

The London-based lawyer for Sheikha Latifa says he hopes the videos will persuade authorities in Dubai to release the young woman who says she just wants to be free.

Sheikha Latifa speaking into a phone camera at an unknown location

Sheikha Latifa speaking into a phone camera at an unknown location Source: AAP

The lawyer for a daughter of Dubai's ruler has urged the Gulf emirate to release the young woman from almost three years of detention and avoid further international scandal after a videotaped plea for freedom spurred the UN's human rights body to seek information about her status.

The case of Sheikha Latifa bint Mohammed Al Maktoum made international headlines on Tuesday after the BBC released excerpts from video diaries she said were recorded in a locked bathroom inside the Dubai villa where she is being held.
Sheikha Latifa was detained by commandos off the coast of India in 2018 after she tried to flee Dubai in a yacht.

The 35 year old hasn't been heard from since she stopped responding to text messages six months ago, friends told the BBC.

The London-based lawyer for Sheikha Latifa played down calls for international sanctions, saying he hopes the videos will persuade authorities in Dubai to release the young woman who says she just wants to be free.

Rodney Dixon helped secure the release of a British researcher who was jailed in the UAE on spying charges in 2018.

"Of course, steps can be taken to, as I've said before, look to impose sanctions, take other actions," Mr Dixon told the Associated Press.

"But why go down that route when we have a simple solution here which should be followed right away," he said.

"Why protract it any longer, getting involved in legal avenues, litigation? This never ultimately benefits anyone over the long term. Better to sort it out right now and do the right thing."
The lawyer for Sheikha Latifa, Rodney Dixon
The lawyer for Sheikha Latifa, Rodney Dixon. Source: Getty
The case is particularly sensitive in the United Kingdom because of economic and historical links to Dubai and the UAE, which has large reserves of oil and natural gas.

The hereditary ruler of Dubai Sheikh Mohammed founded of the successful Godolphin horse-racing stable and has been on friendly terms with Queen Elizabeth.

The secretive ruler's family life was thrust into the news in 2019 when his estranged wife, Princess Haya, fled to London and sought custody of her two children through the British courts.
Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai
Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai Source: AAP
Last year, a British judge ruled the sheikh had conducted a campaign of fear and intimidation against Princess Haya and had ordered the abduction of two of his daughters, including Sheikha Latifa.

Sheikha Latifa's former personal trainer told the BBC that her friend recorded the video diaries on a phone that was smuggled to her about a year after her detention.



In the videos the princess said she is "worried about my safety and my life".

"They want propaganda from me. They wanted me to do a video and say that I'm here happily and voluntarily. And I refused," she said in a video obtained by the Associated Press.
"I don't know what can happen to me and how long this will last. And if they decide to release me, like how my life would be. But I'm not safe at all."

Marcus Essabri, a cousin who lives in England, told the BBC that the videos stopped about six months ago and there had been no word from Ms Latifa since then.

"I fear they caught her with the phone, and now I am fearful for her safety," he said.
The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights said on Wednesday that it would "raise these new developments with the UAE".

Sheikh Mohammed and the Dubai royal court have said Ms Latifa is safe in the loving care of her family.

But Britain said it would like to see proof that she is alive.

British foreign minister Dominic Raab said the video of Ms Latifa was deeply troubling as it showed a woman in deep distress.

"Given what we've just seen, I think people would just at a human level want to see that she's alive and well," Mr Raab told Sky.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he was concerned and that the United Nations was looking into the situation.

"That's something obviously that we are concerned about but the UN Commission on Human Rights is looking at that," he told reporters. "I think what we'll do is wait and see how they get on. We'll keep an eye on that."

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5 min read
Published 18 February 2021 7:42am
Source: AAP, SBS


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