Sheikha Latifa bint Mohammed Al Maktoum, a daughter of Dubai's ruler, in a 40-minute video in which she says she is planning on fleeing the country in Dubai, UAE.Credit: Princess Haya, a wife of Dubai’s ruler, Sheikh Mohammed Al Maktoum, has … The scene was a far cry from that of April 10, 2004, when Haya, 29, married Sheik Mohammed, 25 years her senior. "My father is the most evil person I have ever met in my life,” she says tearfully in the video. Princess Haya, left, with Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, the ruler of Dubai, their son, Sheikh Zayed, and daughter, Sheikha Al Jalila, at … Hamdan's elder full brother was Sheikh Rashid bin Mohammed. She surely knows, as Latifa knew, that asylum provides her the only safe route out of the royal palace,” said Radha Stirling, head of Detained in Dubai, a group campaigning for Latifa’s cause.“If she was abused, she could not go to the police; if she wanted a divorce, she could not go to the courts,” she added in her statement, according to Business Insider.A spokesman for the UAE told the news outlet: “The UAE government does not intend to comment on allegations about individuals’ private lives.” Thanks for contacting us. There's nothing good in him.“If you are watching this it’s not such a good thing, either I’m dead or I’m in a very, very, very bad situation.”“Her Highness Sheikha Latifa is now safe in Dubai,” read a statement released on Thursday by Dubai’s Royal Court. After Haya left Dubai, her half brother King Abdullah II needed to shore up support in the UAE—but he didn’t travel to Dubai to kiss Sheik Mohammed’s ring. “She and her family are looking forward to celebrating her birthday today (sic), in privacy and peace, and to building a happy and stable future for her.”It went on to claim Mr Jaubert had taken her against her will and then demanded a $100million ransom for her returnMr Jaubert could not immediately be reached for comment.Latifa’s disappearance was the subject of BBC2 documentary Escape from Dubai, which is due to air on Thursday night, and likely put pressure on Sheikh Mohammed to respond to questions about her whereabouts.It also reported on the earlier abduction of Latifa’s sister Sheikha Shamsa from the streets of Cambridge, England, in 2000, when she attempted to escape before being kidnapped by UAE authorities and returned home.Radha Stirling, CEO of Detained in Dubai, said: “When the BBC2 documentary airs, Latifa will have been missing for 277 days. “He's pure evil.
We've received your submission.Princess Haya, a wife of Dubai’s ruler, Sheikh Mohammed Al Maktoum, has fled to London amid fears for her life after learning chilling details about the disappearance of one of her husband’s 23 daughters, according to reports.The British-educated Princess Haya Bint al-Hussein, 45, daughter of King Hussein of Jordan, married the sheikh in 2004, becoming his sixth and “junior wife.”She initially fled this year to Germany to seek asylum and is now said to be living in a $107 million townhouse in Kensington Palace Gardens as she prepares for a legal battle in the High Court’s Family Division, Princess Haya also brought her son Zayed, 7, and daughter Al Jalila, 11, to London with her, The billionaire Sheikh Mohammed, 69, vice president of the United Arab Emirates, has posted a cryptic poem on Instagram accusing an unidentified woman of “treachery and betrayal.”“We have an ailment that no medicine can cure, No experts in herbs can remedy this,” reads a line in “Affection in Your Eyes,” Sources close to the princess have said she had recently discovered disturbing facts behind the mysterious return to Dubai last year of Sheikha Latifa, one of the ruler’s 23 children by different wives.The 32-year-old Latifa fled the UAE by sea in February 2018 with the help of a Frenchman, but was intercepted by armed Emirati commandos off the Indian coast and returned to Dubai, according to Business Insider.Before her daring escape attempt, Latifa made a video detailing alleged abuse at the hands of her father — instructing her lawyer to release the tape if her attempt failed.Latifa has not been heard from since and activists fear she has been languishing in jail, though the Emirati embassy in London in December said in a statement that she was alive, and “safe in Dubai.”In 2000, another of the sheik ‘s daughters, Sheikha Shamsa, fled the family’s English country estate in a Range Rover at age 18.
We've received your submission.Princess Haya, a wife of Dubai’s ruler, Sheikh Mohammed Al Maktoum, has fled to London amid fears for her life after learning chilling details about the disappearance of one of her husband’s 23 daughters, according to reports.The British-educated Princess Haya Bint al-Hussein, 45, daughter of King Hussein of Jordan, married the sheikh in 2004, becoming his sixth and “junior wife.”She initially fled this year to Germany to seek asylum and is now said to be living in a $107 million townhouse in Kensington Palace Gardens as she prepares for a legal battle in the High Court’s Family Division, Princess Haya also brought her son Zayed, 7, and daughter Al Jalila, 11, to London with her, The billionaire Sheikh Mohammed, 69, vice president of the United Arab Emirates, has posted a cryptic poem on Instagram accusing an unidentified woman of “treachery and betrayal.”“We have an ailment that no medicine can cure, No experts in herbs can remedy this,” reads a line in “Affection in Your Eyes,” Sources close to the princess have said she had recently discovered disturbing facts behind the mysterious return to Dubai last year of Sheikha Latifa, one of the ruler’s 23 children by different wives.The 32-year-old Latifa fled the UAE by sea in February 2018 with the help of a Frenchman, but was intercepted by armed Emirati commandos off the Indian coast and returned to Dubai, according to Business Insider.Before her daring escape attempt, Latifa made a video detailing alleged abuse at the hands of her father — instructing her lawyer to release the tape if her attempt failed.Latifa has not been heard from since and activists fear she has been languishing in jail, though the Emirati embassy in London in December said in a statement that she was alive, and “safe in Dubai.”In 2000, another of the sheik ‘s daughters, Sheikha Shamsa, fled the family’s English country estate in a Range Rover at age 18.