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Expats are voicing intentions to leave Dubai, vowing never to return as fears for their safety escalate amid ongoing missile strikes across the United Arab Emirates. Concerns over personal security and the destruction of businesses have prompted this exodus.
Once celebrated as a tax-free sanctuary that drew influencers globally and attracted numerous Brits in search of sunny climates and safe streets, Dubai’s polished reputation is now under threat. Many residents feel the city’s allure has diminished.
Among the approximately 240,000 British expats residing in Dubai are notable figures like Rio and Kate Ferdinand, Luisa Zissman, and Petra Ecclestone. The city has been a frequent target of Iranian missile and drone strikes aimed at US allies in the Middle East.
Iran’s aggressive tactics have focused on Dubai, with the city experiencing two-thirds of the missile attacks. A series of powerful explosions on Wednesday morning left the international airport damaged.
Four individuals sustained injuries when two drones impacted the airport terminal, prompting several major airlines to suspend flights to the region indefinitely.
The iconic Fairmont hotel on Palm Jumeirah was also hit, forcing employees from western financial institutions such as Standard Chartered and Citi to evacuate their offices due to threats of further attacks from the Islamic Republic.
Four people have been killed so far and tens of thousands of residents and tourists have now fled in the weeks since the conflict began.
And those who remain face prosecution if they post videos of missiles overhead, despite constant phone alerts warning them to stay away from windows and seek shelter.
Once a tax-free haven, Dubai has lost its golden image as Iranian bombs rain down on the city
Dubai’s international airport has been attacked on multiple occasions and four people were injured after a strike on Wednesday
The emirate is home to around 240,000 British expats including Rio and Kate Ferdinand
Dubai does not have vast oil reserves and relies on its expat population, which makes up 90 per cent of the city.
It has launched a desperate public relations campaign, telling people the ‘big booms’ in the sky are ‘the sound of us being safe’ as the UAE air defence system takes action.
But it has done little to quell fears.
‘The shine has definitely been taken off,’ John Trudinger, a British Dubai resident of 16 years, told The Guardian.
The headteacher employs more than 100 teachers from the UK at his Emirati school and claims most are so ‘deeply traumatised and really struggling to cope’ with the war that they have fled and will never return.
Taxi driver Zain Anwar saw his car destroyed in a missile attack and said his family are begging him to return home to Pakistan.
He said: ‘I don’t want to be in Dubai any more, there is no business, we are earning nothing since this war, and I don’t see the tourism coming back.
‘A lot of taxi drivers like me, we are thinking to go to a different country now. Everybody knows that Dubai is finished.’
Iran has continued to pound the city, sending 1,700 projectiles in two weeks, although 90 per cent have been destroyed by air defence systems.
But on Saturday, a drone was caught on video sending up a huge pall of smoke near the airport.
On Thursday morning a high-rise building in Dubai was pictured with a large hole after a drone strike
Fairmont hotel set ablaze in Dubai by Iran. The truth is that the holidaymakers, and anyone else who can afford to leave, are fleeing for dear life
Socialite Petra Ecclestone cried as she described explosions before, describing how ‘grateful’ she was for ‘how much Dubai puts safety first — and how welcomed and safe it has made us feel’
The official Dubai Media Office continued to insist that ‘no incident’ had occurred at the airport as it clamps down on those sharing footage of damage.
Authorities in the UAE have charged 21 people with cyber crimes for circulating videos showing missiles and explosions.
This includes a Brit who filmed missiles passing overhead and immediately deleted the footage when asked.
Content creators posting ‘misinformation’ face jail time and on Tuesday police said those posting anything which contradicts public announcements, ‘causing public panic’ could face two years behind bars and a fine of £40,000.
And Dubai’s influencer army has released a barrage of posts praising its government in suspiciously similar language – amid claims some are being paid to pump out ‘propaganda’.
Content creators with hundreds of thousands of followers between them have responded to Iranian attacks by sharing images of Dubai leader Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum alongside the words, ‘I know who protects us’.
The posts begin by asking ‘are you scared?’ before flashing up images of Al Maktoum waving to adoring crowds.
Sceptical social media users have responded by claiming the influencers are being paid by the UAE government, also several have spoken out to deny this.
Online content creators need a licence to operate in Dubai, and its government responded to the outbreak of war by threatening prison against anyone sharing information that ‘results in inciting panic among people’.
The tough stance is believed to have encouraged self-censorship by influencers in the Gulf state, with earlier clips of Iranian drone and missile attacks now swamped by posts lauding the regime.
In the first days of the conflict, the government cracked down on ‘citizen journalists’ reposting genuine footage of the first wave of attacks, which included a drone strike on the five-star Fairmont Hotel on the Palm Jumeirah.
The Dubai Media Office responded within a few hours by claiming that ‘outdated images of past fire incidents’ in Dubai were being spread to stoke fear among the city’s residents.
Among the influencers, Kate Ferdinand previously opened up on relocating to the Middle East where she revealed she was ‘homesick and struggling’.
But she made a dramatic U-turn, boasting about how her kids are ‘learning things they wouldn’t in the UK’.
While Luisa Zissman shared a post mocking scared tourists who’ve escaped Dubai and are ‘making out they’ve come back from the frontlines’.
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Should expats stand up to the Dubai authorities?
Influencers in Dubai have been posting identical videos emphasising the safety of the city which have been seen millions of times
Influencers have responded to Iranian attacks by sharing images of Dubai leader Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum alongside the words, ‘I know who protects us’
Standard Chartered and Citi evacuated their offices amid threats from the Islamic Republic that they were the next targets of their bombing onslaught
The Apprentice star, 38, relocated to the UAE from the UK in December, and has thrown her support behind the UAE government, even declaring it to be the ‘safest country in the world’ despite waves of suicide drone attacks.
But after dutifully echoing the official line that the war-hit emirate remains open for business, she has slipped back into Britain.
And Petra Ecclestone gushed about Dubai, describing how ‘grateful’ she was for ‘how much Dubai puts safety first — and how welcomed and safe it has made us feel’.
Meanwhile, British influencer Ben Moss admitted he is more worried about being fined or jailed for posting the ‘wrong’ content than he is of the lethal explosives themselves.
The content creator, from Wandsworth, said: ‘I do feel completely safe here because of the UAE air defences, but the laws can sometimes concern me so I always keep everything positive.
‘I’m far more scared of being fined or jailed for posting the wrong content than I am of the Iranian missiles and drones.’
On Thursday morning a high-rise building in Dubai was pictured with a large hole after a drone strike.
A ship was also attacked off the Dubai port of Jebel Ali as Iran continues to force shut the Strait of Hormuz, crippling the world’s economy.