I was raped in Dubai prison cell and saw a man tortured to death — Mail 11/7/24
I was raped in Dubai prison cell and saw a man tortured to death by having his throat stamped on: Brit who spent 22 months locked up in 'desert hellhole' warns people to NEVER go there and describes terrifying ordeal
By ELENA SALVONI and CAMERON ROY
A Brit who spent 22 months locked up in a 'desert hellhole'
prison in Dubai has described his terrifying ordeal - warning people to never
go there.
David Haigh, the ex-managing director of Leeds United, has
claimed he was raped while on the floor in his cell and saw a man tortured to
death by having his throat stamped on.
The abuse Haigh says he faced included being punched,
tasered, hit with a broom handle and torched during his incarceration at Bur
Dubai police station.
The then football boss was accused of channeling money into
his own accounts by the club's Dubai-based owners - a charge he continues to
label trumped-up.
He said his shocking experience could have been repeated in
the recent high-profile case of Irish air hostess Tori Towey, who was
threatened with jail after she was charged with drinking alcohol and trying to
take her own life after having allegedly suffered domestic abuse.
Now Mr Haigh has spoken to MailOnline to reveal how his
experience in Dubai's prisons left him suffering from PTSD, nightmares and
flashbacks.
'When I heard them say 'We kill Brits here' I just thought
it was them trying to scare me.
'I saw someone who was killed in front of me because he was
being tortured - they dragged him to one area and I could hear them beating him
and they brought him back and he fell down next to me and they stood on his
throat.'
When asked about why the police carried out the alleged
torture methods, Mr Haigh said: 'To get confessions. Some of them use it
because they are evil people and because they can, they take them out to the
desert, put a bag over their head, put a gun to their head and they do it for
sadistic fun.'
He was arrested in May 2014 after flying to the UAE for a
meeting with the club's former owners Gulf Financial House (GFH) in Dubai.
Mr Haigh, who led the negotiations for GFH's takeover of
Leeds United in 2012 from businessman Ken Bates, believed the meeting was about
setting up a private equity investment house.
But instead he was confronted by a local police officer who
accused him of an irregularity with a cheque.
He was then taken to a police station where he attempted to
repay the small amount of money owed - but then found himself locked up on a
false charge.
Haigh said that the conditions of his cell were filthy with
raw sewage leaking onto the floor.
He said: 'Unsanitary doesn't do it justice, there isn't any
toilet paper. The food you get has no nutritional value - they wouldn't give it
to animals here. When I was there we believed it was drugged with some chemical
to subdue people
'The toilets are just buckets outside filled with dirty
water with flies around which you have to scoop out with your hands
'There is no toilet to sit on, there are holes in the floor,
no cleaning fluids provided because they can be used for poison
'There are five or six times more people in it than there
should have been.'
But Mr Haigh is not the only Western tourist or ex-pat who
has been locked up alongside dangerous criminals in unsanitary, cramped cells.
In many cases it has been claimed that prisoners in Dubai
are not charged but are instead forced to confess to a crime while in custody.
Conditions in the jails were brought sharply into focus
after it emerged that Irish air hostess Tori Towey could have faced the inside
of a prison cell this week.
Travel restrictions on her have since been lifted allowing
her to return home following frantic diplomatic efforts.
Mr Haigh has now revealed about how Ms Towey escaped
'horrors that I don't think anyone reading this will understand'.
He said: 'It's degrading for the men but even more so for
the women - they are kept separate from the men but they are in the same jail,
just in the next building
'I tried to take my own life when I was there, if you push
that you are suicidal you will end up in a very bad mental institution, even
worse than the jail, you are treated as if you are a criminal
'The process that she would have to go through, even if she
was mentally strong, is horrendous.'
Mr Haigh also spoke about how the legal system in Dubai
seems to be stacked in the man's favour, with police officers choosing to
believe them over women.
He told the Sun Ms Towey was 'lucky' to be released as
quickly as she was.
'I'd say 90 per cent of people in Dubai are unknowingly
breaking the law and when there's an issue the law comes at you.
'Each day that goes by there are Brits and other
nationalities locked up in Dubai that shouldn't be there but can't get out
because the justice system is corrupt.
'I was imprisoned 10 years ago and I believe I'd be dead or
still in there now if I didn't run a football club and had a high profile.'
Mr Haigh told MailOnline his advice to those looking to
travel to Dubai would be to 'just don't go'.
He said: 'There are thousands of other Brits and westerners
in those jails now, so many and so many other nationalities
'People need to wake up to what Dubai is really like, it's a
hellhole.
'I lived there for 10 years in an absolute bubble, you get
drawn in and start believing the lies.
'I started to see the reason that I can afford the cleaner
four times a week was because she was treated like a slave, the human cost of
the nice life that I have.
'The fool's paradise that they live in is anything other
than a paradise.'
After he got back from Dubai in March 2016, he spent seven
months in hospital trying to recover from the horrors of prison.
In his first interview the month after he was released, Mr
Haigh said: 'They take me to a room at the side. They keep me waiting for an
hour, then another hour, and then a lady came in and said: 'Did you take 23
million?'.
'I said 'what do you mean?' She said: 'GFH. 23 million.
Where is it?'.
'I had gone from running a football club, to having stomach
surgery, to getting on a plane, to landing, to sitting in a police station,
being whacked in the face by some dodgy police guy wearing a green uniform,
shouting at me in Arabic 'where is the money?''
Mr Haigh was told he wasn't getting bail and was led down a
corridor into a cramped detention centre without any further explanation of the
charges against him.
'I will never forget, the smell got so bad as you walked
towards the door where they were going to put you in. It was horrific, a
mixture of everything you don't want to smell in your life.
They opened this iron door and pushed me in, and slammed it
shut. There were no papers, or 'this is what you have been accused of' - that
was it.'
During his time in a hot, dirty prison cell where sewage was
leaking everywhere Haigh said he was denied access to his money and deprived of
medicine he needed after his stomach operation.
He claims he was only allowed to speak to his lawyers for
two minutes a week and was subjected to and witnessed torture during his time
behind bars.
He said: 'They came and got me in the middle of the night,
they took me outside to the car park, then moved me into a room, and then I was
quite seriously physically abused, tasered, whacked in the face, made to stand
in strange positions, and told repeatedly 'where is the money?'.
'I was told if I confessed I could go home. I said I
wouldn't confess, I didn't do it, you can carry on torturing me.
'You are surrounded by this depravity. I will never forget,
I was sitting there and the police are torturing a guy behind me.
'I don't know what he had done, but they had thrown him on
the floor, tasering him, kicking him in the head, three or four of them,
getting a catapult, putting it on his testicles.
'The mental anguish that puts you through, that you are
under a constant threat of abuse, that continued all the way through.
'A month before I left where I was recently, I was standing
in the corridor waiting to get some painkillers and a guard came and hit me
over the head with a broom handle for no apparent reason.'
In 2015 he was found guilty of 'breach of trust' by
defrauding GFH of £3m by falsifying invoices and diverting money into accounts
controlled by him.
Since returning to Britain, Mr Haigh has been spending time
with his family in west Cornwall but is in the process of taking legal action
over his treatment.
He lost around 40kgs in weight during his incarceration and
said the impact on his health has been 'kind of bad'.
He added: 'The abuse I suffered, I was punched around, I was
hit, I was tasered. People attempted to sexually abuse me.
'I have a problem with my eyes, you are constantly kept in
the dark, the lights are very rarely on, so you can't see properly, it damages
your eyes. Just the unbelievable stress you go through, you are trying to
defend yourself and tell the world.'
In a statement about David's case, the Foreign and
Commonwealth Office told The Guardian in 2016: 'Our embassy staff were in
almost daily contact with Mr Haigh throughout his detention, and this included
regular checks on his welfare.
'We also regularly raised his case with UAE authorities,
letting them know we were following it closely.
'We take Mr Haigh's allegations of mistreatment extremely
seriously and are setting out our concerns to the UAE authorities. We only
raise allegations of mistreatment when we have the individual's consent to do
so.'