Skip to main content

Emirati princesses convicted in Belgium for human trafficking


Eight Emirati princesses were convicted of human trafficking by a Belgian court on Friday and were given suspended jail terms and fines in a case stemming from their treatment of servants at a Brussels luxury hotel nearly 10 years ago, their lawyer said.
The Brussels criminal court handed the eight women from Abu Dhabi's ruling al-Nahyan family 15-month suspended sentences for human trafficking and degrading treatment, the lawyer, Stephen Monod, said.
He said the defense was pleased the case was finally resolved after nearly a decade.

"Belgian justice has appropriately assessed this case which has generated many misconceptions," he said in a statement.
The defendants were acquitted of the more serious charge of inhuman treatment but also ordered to pay a fine of 165,000 euros ($184,000), with half the sum suspended.
The eight accused did not appear in court throughout the proceedings.
The case was brought after a servant of the family slipped out of the hotel where the women stayed for several months in 2007 and 2008 and complained to Belgian police.
(Reporting by Charlotte Steenackers and Elizabeth Miles; Editing by Alastair Macdonald and Richard Balmforth)

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Ghostbusters II' twin actor, Henry 'Hank' Deutschendorf commits suicide

Henry 'Hank' Deutschendorf, one of the twins who played Baby Oscar in "Ghostbusters II" has committed suicide. He was 29.

Christopher Nolan girds for box office battle with his World War II action thriller 'Dunkirk'

From left, director Christopher Nolan with Harry Styles, Aneurin Barnard and Fionn Whitehead during the filming of the Warner Bros. action thriller "Dunkirk." (Melinda Sue Gordon) The explosion was not quite shocking enough yet — at least not to Christopher Nolan’s ears. On an early spring afternoon, the director — whose films, including the “Dark Knight” trilogy, “Inception” and “Interstellar,” have collectively grossed well over $4 billion worldwide — sat in a darkened dubbing

Look Out United States: North Korea's Women are Coming To Get You

Hundreds of well-dressed women marched in central Pyongyang on Thursday vowing to seek revenge on the United States. With their fists held high in traditional Communist salutes, they voiced their anger against the "imperial aggressor", the North Korean regime's moniker for the U.S. North Korea's state newspaper Rodong Sinmun announced the march in an article published on Friday morning. The newspaper also revealed that officials and members of the women’s union gathered at the