United
Arab Emirates
Country
Reports on Human Rights Practices -2000
Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights,
and Labor
February 2001
The
United Arab Emirates (UAE) is a federation of
seven emirates established in 1971. None has
any democratically elected institutions or
political parties. Traditional rule in the
emirates generally has been patriarchal, with
political allegiance defined in terms of loyalty
to the tribal leaders. Political leaders in
the emirates are not elected, but citizens may
express their concerns directly to their leaders
via traditional mechanisms, such as the open
majlis, or council. In accordance with the
1971 Constitution, the seven emirate rulers
constitute a Federal Supreme Council, the highest
legislative and executive body. The Council
selects a President and Vice President from its
membership; the President in turn appoints the
Prime Minister and Cabinet. The Constitution
requires the Council to meet annually, although
individual leaders meet frequently in more
traditional settings. The Cabinet manages
the Federation on a day-to-day basis. A
consultative body, the Federal National Council (FNC),
consisting of advisors appointed by the emirate
rulers, has no legislative authority but questions
government ministers in open sessions and makes
policy recommendations to the Cabinet. Each
emirate retains control over its own oil and
mineral wealth, some aspects of internal security,
and some regulation of internal and external
commerce. The federal Government asserts
primacy in matters of foreign and defense policy,
some aspects of internal security, and
increasingly in matters of law and the supply of
some government services. The judiciary
generally is independent, but its decisions are
subject to review by the political leadership.
Each emirate maintains its own independent police
force. While all emirate internal security
organs theoretically are branches of one federal
organization, in practice they operate with
considerable independence.
The UAE has a free market economy based on oil and
gas production, trade, and light manufacturing.
The Government owns the majority share of the
petroleum production enterprise in the largest
emirate, Abu Dhabi. The Emirate of Dubai is
likewise an oil producer, as well as a growing
financial and commercial center in the Gulf.
The remaining five emirates have negligible
petroleum or other resources and therefore depend
in varying degrees on federal government
subsidies, particularly for basic services such as
health care, electricity, water, and education.
The economy provides citizens with a high per
capita income, but it is heavily dependent on
foreign workers, who constitute at least 80
percent of the general population.
The Government generally respected its citizens'
rights in some areas and continued to improve in
other areas; however, its record was poor in other
areas, particularly with respect to its denial of
citizens' right to change their government and its
placement of limitations on the labor rights of
foreign workers. The Government denied
citizens the right to change their government.
The Government at times abused persons in custody,
denied citizens the right to a speedy trial and
legal counsel during police investigations, and
restricted the freedoms of speech, press,
assembly, association, and religion. The
press continued to avoid direct criticism of the
Government and exercised self-censorship.
Women continue to make progress in education and
in the work force. In April the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs issued a directive allowing for
the inclusion of women in the diplomatic corps.
However, some discrimination against women
persists, including informal restrictions on their
ability to register businesses. The
Government limits worker rights, and abuse of
foreign domestic servants is a problem.
There were reports of trafficking in persons.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the
Person, Including Freedom From:
a. Political and Other Extrajudicial Killing
There were no reports of political or other
extrajudicial killings.
b. Disappearance
There were no reports of politically motivated
disappearances.
c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or
Degrading Treatment or Punishment
The
Constitution prohibits torture or degrading
treatment, and there were no confirmed reports of
torture; however, there are consistent but
unconfirmed reports from foreign prisoners of
beatings and coerced confessions by police during
initial detention. The Government conducted
internal investigations of these reports, and
maintained that they were groundless.
According to unconfirmed sources, in March a
Qatari journalist reportedly was subjected to
sleep deprivation and physical abuse during his
2-week detention after the authorities arrested
him for publishing a series of satirical columns
in the Dubai newspaper Gulf News (see Sections
1.d. and 2.a.).
Shari'a (Islamic law) courts frequently impose
flogging (except in Dubai) on Muslims found guilty
of adultery, prostitution, and drug or alcohol
abuse. In practice flogging is administered
in accordance with Shari'a in order as to prevent
major or permanent injuries. The individual
administering the lashing swings the whip using
the forearm only. According to press
accounts, punishments for adultery and
prostitution have ranged from 39 to 200 lashes.
Individuals convicted of drunkenness have been
sentenced to 80 lashes. The federal Supreme
Court ruled in 1993 that convictions in the
Shari'a courts do not necessarily require the
imposition of Shari'a penalties on non-Muslims,
but such sentences have been carried out in a few
cases.
In February an
Indonesian woman convicted of adultery by the
Shari'a court in the Emirate of Fujairah, was
sentenced to death by stoning after she
purportedly insisted on such punishment. The
sentence was commuted on appeal to 1 year in
prison, followed by deportation. In June
1998, the Shari'a court in Fujairah sentenced
three Omani nationals convicted of robbery to have
their right hands amputated. The Fujairah
prosecutor's office instead commuted the sentence
to a term of imprisonment.
In central prisons that hold long-term inmates,
prisoners are provided with food, medical care,
and adequate sanitation facilities, but sleep on
slabs built into cell walls or on the floor.
Each prisoner is provided with four blankets.
Only some blocks of the central prisons are
air-conditioned during the intense heat and
humidity of the summer. The Government
gradually is phasing air conditioning into the
prisons. Currently, prisoners with medical
conditions are placed in air-conditioned rooms
during the summer months. Prisoners not
under investigation and not involved in drug cases
may receive visitors up to three times each week
and may also make occasional local telephone
calls. In Dubai Emirate, most prisoners are
allowed family visits and a number of telephone
calls.
The Government does not permit independent
monitoring of prison conditions.
d. Arbitrary Arrest, Detention, or Exile
The Constitution prohibits arrest, search,
detention, or imprisonment, except in accordance
with the law, and authorities generally respect
these provisions in practice. The law
prohibits arrest or search without probable cause.
Under the Criminal Procedures Code, the police
must report arrests within 48 hours to the
Attorney General, who must determine within the
next 24 hours whether to charge, release, or order
further detention pending an investigation.
The Attorney General may order that detainees be
held for up to 21 days without charge. After
that time, the authorities must obtain a court
order for further detention without charge.
Although the code does not specify a right to a
speedy trial, authorities bring detainees to trial
in reasonable time with the exception of
drug-related cases, for which the authorities must
inform the Office of the President in the Abu
Dhabi Emirate (also known as the Diwan) of the
charges. Trials may last a substantial
period of time, depending on the seriousness of
the charges, number of witnesses, and availability
of judges. There is no formal system of
bail, but the authorities temporarily may release
detainees who deposit money or an important
document such as a passport. The law permits
incommunicado detention, but there is no evidence
that it is practiced. Defendants in cases
involving loss of life, including involuntary
manslaughter, may be denied release in accordance
with the law. However, bail usually is
permitted, after a payment of "diya," a
form of financial compensation for death or injury
cases.
Review of criminal cases by the office of the
President in Abu Dhabi and bureaucratic delays in
processing prisoners or releasing them sometimes
result in detainees serving additional,
unnecessary time in the central prisons (see
Section 1.e.). Some bureaucratic delays have
kept prisoners incarcerated for as long as several
months beyond their court-mandated release dates.
According to unconfirmed sources, in March a
Qatari journalist was subjected to sleep
deprivation and physical abuse during his 2-week
detention after the authorities arrested him for
publishing a series of satirical columns in the
Dubai newspaper Gulf News (see Sections 1.c. and
2.a.).
The Crown Prince of Dubai in August granted an
amnesty for 200 citizen and 300 foreigner
prisoners convicted of drug-related offenses.
The foreign prisoners were deported upon release.
To celebrate the success of the surgery performed
in August on the President, the ruler of the
Emirate of Ras Al-Khaimah ordered the release of
119 prisoners who had been convicted on charges
relating to financial crimes. The release
was followed by the issuance of amnesty orders by
the ruler of Umm Al-Quwain, which allowed for the
release of an unspecified number of prisoners, and
by the Abu Dhabi Crown Prince, ordering the
release of 150 prisoners convicted of financial
crimes.
The Constitution prohibits exile, and it is not
practiced.
e. Denial of Fair Public Trial
The Constitution provides for the independence of
the judiciary; however, its decisions are subject
to review by the political leadership.
There is a dual system of Shari'a and civil
courts. The civil courts generally are part
of the federal system and are answerable to the
federal Supreme Court, located in Abu Dhabi, which
has the power of judicial review as well as
original jurisdiction in disputes between emirates
or between the federal Government and individual
emirates. Courts and other elements of the
judicial system in the Emirate of Dubai tend to
maintain independence from the federal system.
The Shari'a courts are administered by each
emirate but also must answer to the federal
Supreme Court. In 1994 the President decreed
that the Shari'a courts, and not the civil courts,
would have the authority to try almost all types
of criminal cases. The decree did not affect
the emirates of Dubai and Ras Al-Khaimah, which
have lower courts independent of the federal
system. Dubai has a special Shi'a council to
act on matters pertaining to Shi'a family law (see
Section 5).
Legal counsel may represent defendants in both
court systems. Under the new Criminal
Procedures Code, the accused has a right to
counsel in all cases involving a capital crime or
possible life imprisonment. Only the Emirate
of Dubai has a public defender's office. If
the defendant is indigent, the Government will
provide counsel. However, in Dubai the
Government provides indigents counsel only in
felony cases. The Supreme Court ruled in
1993 that a defendant in an appeals case has a
"fundamental right" to select his
attorney and that this right supersedes a judge's
power to appoint an attorney for the defendant.
The right to legal counsel is interpreted to
provide that the accused is entitled to an
attorney only after the police have completed
their investigation. Thus, the police may
question accused persons--sometimes for days or
weeks, as in narcotics cases--without the benefit
of legal counsel.
Defendants are presumed innocent until proven
guilty. There are no jury trials. The
number of judges sitting for a case depends on the
type of crime alleged; three judges normally sit
for criminal cases. All trials are public,
except national security cases and those deemed by
the judge likely to harm public morality.
Most judges are foreign nationals, primarily from
other Arab countries; however, the number of
citizens serving as public prosecutors and judges,
particularly at the federal level, continued to
grow.
Each court system has an appeals process.
Death sentences may be appealed to the ruler of
the emirate in which the offense was committed or
to the President of the Federation.
Non-Muslims who are tried for criminal offenses in
Shari'a courts may receive civil penalties at the
discretion of the judge. Shari'a penalties
imposed on non-Muslims may be overturned or
modified by a higher court.
The Diwan, following the traditional prerogatives
of a local ruler, maintains the practice of
reviewing many types of criminal and civil
offenses (such as alcohol use, drug-related cases,
firearm use, cases involving personal injury, and
cases affecting tribal harmony) before cases are
referred to the prosecutor's office.
However, this practice is not as prevalent as in
past years, and such cases usually are referred
directly to the prosecutor's office. The
Diwan also reviews sentences passed by judges and
reserves the right to return cases to the courts
on appeal. The Diwan's involvement leads to
long delays prior to and following the judicial
process, causing prisoners to remain in prison
after they have completed their sentence.
Although there are reports of intervention by
other emirates' rulers in specific cases of
personal interest, intervention does not appear to
be routine.
The military has its own court system based on
Western military judicial practice. Military
tribunals try only military personnel. There
is no separate national security court system.
In Dubai convicted criminals are eligible for
executive pardon, often based on humanitarian
grounds, once they have served at least half of
their sentence.
There were no reports of political prisoners.
f. Arbitrary Interference with Privacy,
Family, Home, or Correspondence
The Constitution prohibits entry into homes
without the owner's permission, except in
accordance with the law. Only police
officers and public prosecutors carrying a warrant
are permitted entry into homes. If the
authorities enter a home without a warrant, their
actions are considered illegal. In an August
case in Dubai, a judge suppressed evidence that
was obtained by police without a warrant.
Officers' actions in searching premises are
subject to review, and officers are subject to
disciplinary action if they act irresponsibly.
Local custom and practice place a high value on
privacy, and entry into private homes without the
owner's permission is rare. There is no
known surveillance of private correspondence.
However, foreigners have received sealed
publications, such as magazines, through the
international mail in which pictures of the naked
human figure have been blackened over with a
marking pen.
Family law for Muslims is governed by Shari'a and
the local Shari'a courts. As such, Muslim
women are forbidden to marry non-Muslims.
Such a marriage may result in both partners being
arrested and tried.
Section 2 Respect for Civil Liberties,
Including:
a. Freedom of Speech and Press
The Constitution provides for freedom of speech;
however, the Government limits this right in
practice. Most persons, especially foreign
nationals, refrain from criticizing the Government
in public.
All published material is subject to Federal Law
15 of 1988, which stipulates that all
publications, whether books or periodicals, should
be licensed by the Ministry of Information.
The law also governs content and contains a list
of proscribed subjects. Mindful of these
provisions, journalists censor themselves when
reporting on government policy, the ruling
families, national security, religion, and
relations with neighboring states. However,
following an October 1999 interview with the
semiofficial daily newspaper Al-Ittihad, in which
Deputy Prime Minister Sultan Bin Zayid Al-Nahyan
stated that uncovering inefficiencies in
government was one of the duties of the press,
newspapers began publishing articles critical of
alleged inefficiencies in the delivery of services
by the Ministries of Health, Education, and
Electricity and Water. In August the
English-language daily newspaper Gulf News
featured a two-part expose on life in the Dubai
women's central prison. A rare look into a
women's correctional facility, the series included
interviews with citizen and foreign prisoners,
describing in depth a typical day in the prison.
In December a new Arabic-language newspaper,
Akhbar Al-Arab, owned by a member of the Al-Nahyan
ruling family, was established in Abu Dhabi.
However, in March the Ministry of Information and
Culture filed a lawsuit against the Dubai
newspaper Gulf News in response to a series of
sharply satirical columns that it published by
Qatari journalist Abdul-Wahed Al-Mawlawi, which
featured self-deprecatory humor regarding
stereotypes of alleged shortcomings of Gulf Arabs.
The Government considered the articles to be
offensive to Gulf citizens in general and to the
country's citizens in particular. According
to unconfirmed sources, the Government also
arrested Al-Mawlawi about 1 week after the
publication of the last of the columns, reportedly
subjected him to sleep deprivation and physical
abuse during his 2-week detention, then expelled
him to Qatar (see Sections 1.c. and 1.d.).
The Ministry withdrew the lawsuit after the editor
of the newspaper agreed to publish on the front
page of the Gulf News a one-page apology for
having caused any offense. In September the
Government briefly banned 10 prominent citizens,
including 4 university professors, from publishing
opinion pieces in the country's Arabic- and
English-language press. The Ministry of
Information imposed the ban after the writers took
up the cause in the press of over 100 employees
who had been laid off by the government-financed
Emirates Media Corporation. No official
justification was given for the ban, which was
lifted against all 10 citizens by late October.
In September 1999, Emirates Media, which publishes
Al-Ittihad and owns Abu Dhabi's radio and
television stations, issued a directive forbidding
all its employees, including journalists, from
speaking with representatives of foreign
diplomatic missions without prior approval.
Also in 1999, Dubai Emirate announced plans to
open a press club as part of its effort to promote
Dubai as a major regional communications hub.
The club provides facilities for the international
press, including access to information, and serves
as a site for open discussions between political
figures and journalists. The country's three
English-language newspapers are privately owned,
as are three out of its six Arabic-language
newspapers; however, privately owned newspapers
receive government subsidies. Foreign
publications routinely are subjected to censorship
before distribution.
All television and radio stations, with the
exception of Ajman Emirate's local television
station, are government owned and conform to
government reporting guidelines. These
unpublished guidelines are not always applied
consistently. In July 1999, Emirates Media
purchased Ajman Emirate's satellite television
station. Satellite receiving dishes are
widespread and provide access to international
broadcasts without apparent censorship.
Censors at the Ministry of Information and Culture
review imported newspapers, periodicals, books,
films, and videos and ban any material considered
pornographic, violent, derogatory to Islam,
supportive of certain Israeli positions, unduly
critical of friendly countries, or critical of the
Government or the ruling families. In June
the state telephone and Internet monopoly
substantially lowered Internet prices for the
third time in 3 years and sought to encourage
greater use of the Internet. The Internet
monopoly uses a proxy server that appears aimed,
in most instances, at blocking material regarded
as pornographic or as promoting radical Islamic
ideologies. In most cases, the proxy server
does not appear to block news services or
political expression unrelated to radical Islam,
or material originating from specific countries.
However, the Internet monopoly solicits
suggestions from users regarding
"objectionable" sites and sometimes has
responded by briefly blocking some politically
oriented sites, which were, after an apparent
review, later unblocked. In October
following the increase in violence in Israel, the
West Bank, and Gaza, Etislat established a web
page depicting images of the dead and injured, and
containing a discussion forum and bulletin boards,
in which persons accessing the page could post
their opinions.
The unwritten but generally recognized ban on
criticism of the Government also restricts
academic freedom, although in recent years
academics have been more open in their criticism.
Academic materials destined for schools in the
country are subject to censorship. At Zayid
University, the female students are banned from
reading texts in which the human body is pictured
or sexuality is featured (see Section 5).
b. Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and
Association
The Government tightly restricts the freedom of
peaceful assembly. Organized public
gatherings require a government permit. Each
emirate determines its own practice on public
gatherings. Some emirates are relatively
tolerant of seminars and conferences on sensitive
subjects. Citizens normally confine their
political discussions to the numerous gatherings
or majlis, which are held in private homes.
There are no restrictions on such gatherings.
In October the Government issued permits for
demonstrations throughout the country to protest
the Israeli Government's actions against
Palestinians in Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza
during the fall. These public marches, in
which both citizens and foreigners participated,
were peaceful in nature. Demonstrations,
many of which were organized by female students,
also took place at universities.
The Government tightly restricts freedom of
association. Unauthorized political
organizations are prohibited. All private
associations, including children's clubs,
charitable groups, and hobby associations, must be
approved and licensed by local authorities;
however, this requirement is enforced only loosely
in some emirates. Private associations must
follow the Government's censorship guidelines if
they publish any material.
c. Freedom of Religion
The federal Constitution designates Islam as the
official religion, and Islam is also the official
religion of all seven of the individual emirates
of the federal union. The federal
Constitution also provides for the freedom to
exercise religious worship in accordance with
established customs, provided that it does not
conflict with public policy or violate public
morals, and the Government generally respects this
right in practice; however, the Government
controls all Sunni mosques and prohibits
proselytizing.
Virtually all Sunni mosques are government funded
or subsidized; about 5 percent of Sunni mosques
are entirely private, and several large mosques
have large private endowments. The federal
Ministry of Awqaf and Religious Affairs
distributes weekly guidance to both Sunni and
Shi'a sheikhs regarding religious sermons and
ensures that clergy do not deviate frequently or
significantly from approved topics in their
sermons. All Sunni imams are employees of
either the federal Ministry of Awqaf and Religious
Affairs or individual emirate ministries. In
1993 the Emirate of Dubai placed private mosques
under the control of its Department of Islamic
Affairs and Endowments. This change gave the
Government control over the appointment of
preachers and the conduct of their work.
The Shi'a minority, which is concentrated in the
northern emirates, is free to worship and maintain
its own mosques. All Shi'a mosques are
considered private and receive no funds from the
Government. The Government does not appoint
sheikhs for Shi'a mosques. Shi'a Muslims in
Dubai may pursue Shi'a family law cases through a
special Shi'a council rather than the Shari'a
courts.
In April the Ras Al-Khaimah Shari'a court ruled
that anyone found guilty of employing a magician
to cast a spell on others would be sentenced to
death. The ruling followed the sentencing of
a citizen to 4 months' imprisonment for allegedly
hiring a magician to cast a spell on her former
husband and sister.
The Government does not recognize all non-Muslim
religions. In those emirates that officially
recognize and thereby grant a legal identity to
non-Muslim religious groups, only a limited number
of Christian groups are granted this recognition.
While recognizing the difference between Roman
Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, and Protestant
Christianity, the authorities make no legal
distinction between Christian groups, particularly
Protestants. Several often-unrelated
Christian congregations are required to share
common facilities because of official limitations
on the number of Christian denominations that are
recognized officially. Non-Muslim and
non-Christian religions are not recognized legally
in any of the emirates. Partly as a result
of emirate policies regarding recognition of
non-Muslim denominations, facilities for Christian
congregations are far greater in number and size
than those for non-Christian and non-Muslim
groups, despite the fact that Christians are a
small minority of non-Muslim foreigners.
Major cities have Christian churches, some that
were built on land donated by the ruling families
of the emirates in which they are located.
In Sharjah a new Catholic church was opened in
1997 and a new Armenian Orthodox church in 1998,
both with public ceremonies. The Government
of Dubai Emirate donated a parcel of land in Jebel
Ali in 1998 for the construction of a facility to
be shared by four Protestant congregations and a
Catholic congregation. Also in 1998, land
was designated in Jebel Ali for the construction
of a second Christian cemetery, and Abu Dhabi
Emirate donated land for the expansion of existing
Christian burial facilities. In 1999 land
was designated in Ras Al-Khaimah Emirate for the
construction of a new Catholic church.
Dubai permits one Hindu temple and two Sikh
temples to operate. There are no such
temples elsewhere in the country. There are
no Buddhist temples; however, Buddhists, along
with Hindus and Sikhs in cities without temples,
conduct religious ceremonies in private homes
without interference. In 1998 Abu Dhabi
Emirate donated land for the establishment of the
country's first Baha'i cemetery. There are
only two operating cremation facilities and
associated cemeteries for the large Hindu
community, one in Dubai and one in Sharjah.
Official permission must be obtained for their use
in every instance, posing a hardship for the large
Hindu community, and neither accepts Hindus who
have died in other parts of the country for
cremation or burial. The remains of Hindus
who die outside Dubai and Sharjah in all cases
must be repatriated to their home country at
considerable expense.
Non-Muslims in the country are free to practice
their religion but may not proselytize publicly or
distribute religious literature. The
Government follows a policy of tolerance towards
non-Muslim religions and in practice interferes
very little in the religious activities of
non-Muslims. Apparent differences in the
treatment of Muslim and non-Muslim groups often
have their origin in the dichotomy between
citizens and noncitizens rather than religious
difference.
The Government permits foreign clergy to minister
to foreign populations, and non-Muslim religious
groups are permitted to engage in private
charitable activities and to send their children
to private schools. Apart from donated land
for the construction of churches and other
religious facilities, including cemeteries,
non-Muslim groups are not supported financially or
subsidized by the Government. However, they
are permitted to raise money from among their
congregants and to receive financial support from
abroad. Christian churches are permitted to
advertise openly certain church functions, such as
memorial services, in the press.
The conversion of Muslims to other religions is
regarded with extreme antipathy. While there
is no law against missionary activities,
authorities have threatened to revoke the
residence permits of persons suspected of such
activities, and customs authorities have
questioned the entry of large quantities of
religious materials (Bibles, hymnals, etc.) that
they deemed in excess of the normal requirements
of existing congregations, although in most
instances the questions have been resolved and the
items have been admitted.
There have been reports that customs authorities
are less likely to question the importation of
Christian religious items than other non-Muslim
religious items, although in virtually all
instances importation of the material in question
eventually has been permitted.
Although emirate immigration authorities routinely
ask foreigners to declare their religious
affiliation, the Government does not collect or
analyze this information, and religious
affiliation is not a factor in the issuance or
renewal of visas or residence permits.
d. Freedom of Movement Within the Country,
Foreign Travel, Emigration, and Repatriation
There are no limitations on freedom of movement or
relocation within the country, except for security
areas such as defense and oil installations.
Unrestricted foreign travel and emigration are
permitted to male citizens, except those involved
in financial disputes under adjudication. A
husband may bar his wife and children from leaving
the country. All citizens have the right to
return. There is a small population of
stateless residents, many of whom have lived in
the country for more than one generation.
Many stateless residents are originally from Iran
and South Asia; other stateless residents include
Bedouins or the descendants of Bedouins who are
unable to prove that they are of UAE origin.
There is no formal procedure for naturalization,
although foreign women receive citizenship by
marriage to a citizen, and anyone may receive a
passport by presidential fiat. Because they
are not of the original tribal groups, naturalized
citizens may have their passports and citizenship
status revoked for criminal or politically
provocative actions. Such revocations are
rare.
Citizens are not restricted in seeking or changing
employment. However, foreign nationals in
specific occupations, primarily professional, may
not change employers without first leaving the
country for 6 months. During 1997 in an
effort to liberalize employment regulations, the
federal Government removed the 6-month ban from
some of these professions. Some foreign
nationals involved in disputes with employers,
particularly in cases in which the employee has
signed a contract containing a clause not to
compete, may be blacklisted by the employer with
immigration authorities, effectively preventing
their return for a specified period of time.
The Government has not formulated a formal policy
regarding refugees, asylees, or first asylum.
It may detain persons seeking refugee status,
particularly non-Arabs, while they await
resettlement in a third country.
Section 3 Respect for Political Rights:
The Right of Citizens to Change Their Government
There are no democratically elected institutions,
and citizens do not have the right to change their
government or to form political parties.
Although there are consultative councils at the
federal and emirate levels, most executive and
legislative power is in the hands of the Federal
Supreme Council. The seven emirate rulers,
their extended families, and those persons and
families to whom they are allied by historical
ties, marriage, or common interest wield most
political power in their respective emirates.
Decisions at the federal level are generally made
by consensus among the sheikhs of the seven
emirates and leading families.
A federal consultative body, called the Federal
National Council, consists of advisers appointed
by the rulers of each emirate. The FNC has
no legislative authority but may question
ministers and make policy recommendations to the
Cabinet. Its sessions usually are open to
the public.
The choice of appointing a new emirate ruler falls
to the ruling family in consultation with other
prominent tribal figures. By tradition
rulers and ruling families are presumed to have
the right to rule, but their incumbency ultimately
depends on the quality of their leadership and
their responsiveness to their subjects' needs.
Emirate rulers are accessible, in varying degrees,
to citizens who have a problem or a request.
Tradition rather than the law limits the political
role of women. Women are free to hold
government positions, but there are few women in
senior positions. There are no female
members of the FNC. In December President
Zayid's wife, Sheikha Fatima, who is chairwoman of
the Women's Federation, renewed her call for women
to participate in the country's political life.
In 1998 Sheikha Fatima had announced the
Government's intention to appoint a number of
women as special observers at the FNC. These
observers are to learn the procedures of the FNC,
and it is expected that some later may be
appointed as members. The observers have not
been named yet. In a number of press
interviews, Sheikha Fatima has stated that women
participate in the preparation of legislation
dealing with social issues through recommendations
made by the Women's Federation, and that women are
only "steps away" from full political
participation. At the same time, she
emphasized her view that the eventual appointment
of women to the FNC and other government positions
would be "a responsibility rather than an
honor," requiring careful prior preparation.
Although the small Shi'a minority has enjoyed
commercial success, few Shi'a Muslims have top
positions in the federal Government.
Section 4 Governmental Attitude Regarding
International and Nongovernmental Investigation of
Alleged Violations of Human Rights
There are no independent human rights groups.
Government restrictions on freedom of the press
and public association make it difficult for such
groups to investigate and publicly criticize the
Government's human rights restrictions. A
human rights section exists within Dubai Emirate's
police force to monitor allegations of human
rights abuses. Informal public discussions
of human rights, press reports of international
human rights forums' activities, and media
coverage of selected local human rights problems,
such as foreign workers' conditions, are
increasing public awareness of human rights.
Section 5 Discrimination Based on Race, Sex,
Religion, Disability, Language, or Social Status
The Constitution provides for equality before the
law with regard to race, nationality, religious
beliefs, or social status. However, there is
institutional and cultural discrimination based on
sex, nationality, and religion.
Women
There are reported cases of spousal abuse.
Police units are stationed at major public
hospitals so that victims of abuse may file
complaints, or attending physicians may call upon
the police to interview suspected victims of
abuse. However, women sometimes are
reluctant to file formal charges for social,
cultural, and economic reasons. When abuse
is reported to the local police, authorities may
take action to protect women. The laws
protect women from verbal abuse or harassment from
men, and violators are subject to criminal action.
There continue to be credible reports of abuse of
female domestic servants by some local and foreign
employers (see Section 6.e.).
Prostitution has become an increasingly open
phenomenon in recent years, particularly in Dubai.
Although no accurate statistics are available,
substantial numbers of women appear to be arriving
from the states of the former Soviet Union for
temporary stays during which they engage in
prostitution and possibly other activities
connected with organized crime. Substantial
numbers of prostitutes also appear to come from
Africa and Central and South Asia. In 1999
Dubai police established special patrols in areas
frequented by prostitutes in an effort to control
the phenomenon. There were credible reports
of trafficking in women (see Section 6.f.).
Women play a subordinate role in this
family-centered society because of early marriages
and traditional attitudes about women's duties.
There are no legal prohibitions against women
owning property or businesses; however there are
restrictions against female ownership. Women
must inherit property or businesses from a father
or husband, or, if unmarried, receive a grant of
land from the ruling family in the emirate in
which they reside. In the case of women who
are married, the land must be granted to the
husbands. Husbands may bar their wives and
children from leaving the country (see Section
2.d.), and a married woman may not accept
employment without her husband's written consent,
although such permission usually is granted.
Shari'a, according to the Maliki school of
jurisprudence, is applied in cases of divorce.
Women are granted custody of female children until
they reach the age of maturity and are granted
temporary custody of male children until they
reach the age of 12. If the mother is deemed
unfit, custody reverts to the next able female
relative on the mother's side. A woman who
remarries may forfeit her right to the custody of
children from a previous marriage. Shari'a
permits polygyny. In November the Government
issued a new ruling granting a woman a divorce if
it can be proved that her husband has deliberately
stayed away from here for 3 months and has not
paid for her upkeep, or for the maintenance of her
children.
There are no legal prohibitions against a woman
owning her own business. Traditionally,
professional women, including doctors, architects,
and lawyers, have not faced restrictions in
licensing businesses in their names.
However, there are credible reports that women
attempting to license businesses in the
import-export sector, particularly in the Emirate
of Dubai, encounter greater scrutiny than men.
The Abu Dhabi Chamber of Commerce operates
occasional programs to encourage small business
entrepreneurship on the part of women. A
woman's property is not commingled with that of
her husband. Women who work outside the home
do not receive equal benefits, such as housing,
and may face discrimination in promotion. A
draft 1998 law that would entitle women to
maternity leave of up to 2 months, compared with
the 45 days granted under the current law, has yet
to be approved by the Government. A number
of women's groups have been pressing the
Government to grant mothers 3 months of maternity
leave at full pay and to provide day care
facilities at the workplace.
Opportunities for women have grown in government
service, education, private business, and health
services. Women constitute 15 percent of the
national workforce. The federal Government
publicly has encouraged women to join the work
force, ensuring public sector employment for all
who apply. In April the Minister of State
for Foreign Affairs mandated the employment of
women in the diplomatic corps. According to
the available statistics, women constitute 100
percent of nursery school teachers, 55 percent of
primary school teachers, 65 percent of
intermediate and secondary school teachers, 54.3
percent of health care workers, and 39.8 percent
of all government employees. Women also
constitute 4 percent of the military.
Cultural barriers and the lack of economic
necessity have limited female participation.
A symposium promoting the rights of women in the
labor force was held in 1996. Participants
called for increasing the rights granted to women,
including the elimination of the requirement that
a husband give approval before his wife may work.
Women continue to make rapid progress in
education. They constitute over 75 percent
of the student body at the National University in
Al-Ain, largely because women, unlike men, rarely
study abroad. In 1998 the Government
established Zayid University, a second state-run
university, with campuses in Abu Dhabi and Dubai,
exclusively for women. However, academic
materials are subject to censorship, and female
students are banned from reading texts in which
the human body is pictured or sexuality is
featured (see Section 2.a.).
Women officially are encouraged to continue their
education, and government-sponsored women's
centers provide adult education and technical
training courses. The federal armed forces
accept female volunteers, who may enroll in a
special training course that was started after the
Gulf War. The Dubai Police College recruits
women, many of whom are deployed at airports,
immigration offices, and women's prisons.
Over 200 women have graduated from the College so
far.
The law prohibits cohabitation by unmarried
couples. The Government may imprison and
deport noncitizen women if they bear children out
of wedlock. In the event that the courts
sentence women to prison for such an offense,
local authorities, at the request of the prisoner,
may hold the newborn children in a special areas
within the confines of the prison or place them
with a relative. In rare cases, children are
held in other facilities until the mother's
release. In Dubai Emirate, unmarried
pregnant women must marry the father of the child;
both parties are subject to arrest for
fornication.
Children
The Government is committed to the welfare of
children. Children who are citizens receive
free health care and education, and are ensured
housing. A family also may be eligible to
receive aid from the Ministry of Labor and Social
Welfare for sons and daughters who are under the
age of 18, unmarried, or disabled. There is
no pattern of societal child abuse.
People with Disabilities
There is no federal legislation requiring
accessibility for the disabled. However, the
Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs sponsors
centers that provide facilities and services to
the disabled. Services range from monthly
social aid funds, special education, and
transportation assistance, to sending a team to
the Special Olympics.
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
Discrimination based on national origin, while not
legally sanctioned, is prevalent.
Employment, immigration, and security policy, as
well as cultural attitudes towards foreign
workers, are conditioned by national origin.
Section 6 Worker Rights
a. The Right of Association
There are no unions and no strikes. The law
does not grant workers the right to organize
unions or to strike. Foreign workers, who
make up the bulk of the work force, risk
deportation if they attempt to organize unions or
to strike.
Since 1995 the UAE has been suspended from the
U.S. Overseas Private Investment Corporation
insurance programs because of the Government's
lack of compliance with internationally recognized
worker rights standards.
b. The Right to Organize and Bargain
Collectively
The law does not grant workers the right to engage
in collective bargaining, and it is not practiced.
However, some professional associations are
granted greater freedom to raise work-related
concerns, to lobby the Government for redress, or
to file a grievance with the Government.
Workers in the industrial and service sectors
normally are employed under contracts that are
subject to review by the Ministry of Labor and
Social Affairs. The Ministry of Interior's
Naturalization and Residency Administration is
responsible for reviewing the contracts of
domestic employees as part of residency permit
processing. The purpose of the review is to
ensure that the pay satisfies the employee's basic
needs and secures a means of living. For the
resolution of work-related disputes, workers must
rely on conciliation committees organized by the
Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs or on special
labor courts.
Labor laws do not cover government employees,
domestic servants, and agricultural workers.
The latter two groups face considerable difficulty
in obtaining assistance to resolve disputes with
employers. While any worker may seek redress
through the courts, this process puts a heavy
financial burden on those in lower income
brackets.
In Dubai's Jebel Ali Free Zone, the same labor
laws apply as in the rest of the country.
c. Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor
Forced or compulsory labor is illegal.
However, some unscrupulous employment agents bring
foreign workers to the country under conditions
approaching indenture. There are credible
reports that some women from Central Europe and
Central and South Asia, who are brought to the
country for service sector employment, later are
forced into prostitution (see Section 6.f.).
The Government prohibits forced and bonded child
labor and generally enforces this prohibition
effectively. However, the use of small
children as camel jockeys is a problem. In
September the Abu Dhabi police took into
protective custody and repatriated a 10-year-old
Pakistani boy who allegedly had been kidnaped from
his village in Pakistan and brought to the UAE to
work as a jockey in camel races. In 1999
authorities acting on information provided by the
Pakistani Embassy, located and repatriated an
8-year-old Pakistani boy who allegedly had been
kidnaped to work as a camel jockey. Police
reportedly are investigating several such cases;
however, to date no charges have been filed.
There continue to be credible reports that
hundreds of underage boys from South Asia, mainly
between the ages of 4 and 10, continue to be used
as camel jockeys (See Sections 6.d. and 6.f.).
d. Status of Child Labor Practices and
Minimum Age for Employment
Labor regulations prohibit employment of persons
under the age of 15 and have special provisions
for employing those 15 to 18 years of age.
The Department of Labor enforces the regulations.
Other regulations permit employers to engage only
adult foreign workers. In 1993 the
Government prohibited the use of children under
the age of 15 as camel jockeys and the use of
jockeys who do not weigh more than 99 pounds.
The Camel Racing Association is responsible for
enforcing these rules. However, credible
sources report that almost all camel jockeys are
children under the minimum employment age (see
Section 6.f.). Relevant labor laws sometimes
are enforced against criminal trafficking rings,
but not against those who own racing camels and
employ the children, because such owners come from
powerful local families that are in effect above
the law. According to credible sources,
there were at least 20 cases during the year of
underage camel jockeys who were repatriated to
their countries of origin. In September the
Abu Dhabi police took into protective custody and
repatriated a 10-year-old Pakistani boy who
allegedly had been kidnaped from his village in
Pakistan and brought to the country to work as a
camel jockey. Reports of underage camel
jockeys continued to surface in the local press
during the year. In 1999 authorities, acting
on information provided by the Pakistani Embassy,
located and repatriated an 8-year-old Pakistani
boy who allegedly had been kidnaped to work as a
camel jockey. Also in 1999, a 4-year-old boy
from Bangladesh, who had been used as a camel
jockey, was found wandering in the desert after
being abandoned there by his handlers. In
1998 a local newspaper reported the
hospitalization of a 5-year-old, 44-pound
(20-kilogram) abandoned Bangladeshi child who had
been used as a jockey and whose leg had been
broken by a camel. Police reportedly are
investigating several of these cases; however, no
charges have ever been filed.
Otherwise, child labor is not tolerated. The
Government prohibits forced and bonded child labor
and generally enforces this prohibition
effectively (see Section 6.c.). The
Government does not issue visas for foreign
workers under the age of 16 years. Education
is compulsory through the intermediate levels
(approximately 13 to 14 years' old).
e. Acceptable Conditions of Work
There is no legislated or administrative minimum
wage. Supply and demand determine
compensation. However, according to the
Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs, there is an
unofficial, unwritten minimum wage rate that would
afford a worker and family a minimal standard of
living. The Labor and Social Affairs
Ministry reviews labor contracts and does not
approve any contract that stipulates a clearly
unacceptable wage (see Section 6.b.).
The standard workday and workweek are 8 hours per
day, 6 days per week; however, these standards are
not enforced strictly. Certain types of
workers, notably domestic servants, may be obliged
to work longer than the mandated standard hours.
The law also provides for a minimum of 24 days per
year of annual leave plus 10 national and
religious holidays. In addition manual
workers are not required to do outdoor work when
the temperature exceeds 112 degrees Fahrenheit.
Most foreign workers receive either
employer-provided housing or housing allowances,
medical care, and homeward passage from their
employers. Most foreign workers do not earn
the minimum salary of $1,090 per month (or $817
per month, if a housing allowance is provided in
addition to the salary) required to obtain
residency permits for their families.
Employers have the option to petition for a
6-month ban from the work force against any
foreign employee who leaves his job without
fulfilling the terms of his contract.
The Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Labor and
Social Affairs, municipalities, and civil defense
units enforce health and safety standards.
The Government requires every large industrial
concern to employ a certified occupational safety
officer. An injured worker is entitled to
fair compensation. Health standards are not
observed uniformly in the housing camps that are
provided for foreign workers. Workers' jobs
are not protected if they remove themselves from
what they consider to be unsafe working
conditions. However, the Ministry of Labor
and Social Affairs may require employers to
reinstate workers who were dismissed for not
performing unsafe work. All workers have the
right to lodge grievances with Ministry officials,
who make an effort to investigate all complaints.
However, the Ministry is understaffed and
underbudgeted; complaints and compensation claims
are backlogged.
Rulings on complaints may be appealed within the
Ministry and ultimately to the courts.
However, many workers choose not to protest for
fear of reprisals or deportation. The press
periodically carries reports of abuses suffered by
domestic servants, particularly women, at the
hands of some employers. Allegations have
included excessive work hours, nonpayment of
wages, and verbal and physical abuse.
f. Trafficking in Persons
The law does not prohibit specifically trafficking
in persons, and there were reports that it
occurred; however, child smuggling, prostitution,
and pornography are crimes.
South Asian boys, generally from Pakistan and
Bangladesh, are smuggled into the country by
small, organized groups to be used as camel
jockeys. Some of the smuggled children
reportedly are kidnaped from their families in
South Asia, but some apparently are sold to the
smugglers by their parents. Hundreds of
underage camel jockeys currently work in the
country, many of them in the Abu Dhabi Emirate.
The largest camel-racing tracks (and associated
stables and training facilities) are in Al-Ain and
Ghantoot in Abu Dhabi. The gangs provide the
stables with the youths, who generally are between
the ages of 4 and 10. In May local
authorities, working on information provided by
the Pakistani Embassy, broke up a smuggling ring
involved in illegally transporting underage
Pakistani boys into the country to work as camel
jockeys. Local authorities prosecuted the
foreign smugglers in this case; however, the
authorities did not investigate the citizens
involved in the scheme. In September the Abu
Dhabi police took into protective custody and
repatriated a 10-year-old Pakistani boy who
allegedly had been kidnaped from his village in
Pakistan and brought to the country to work as a
camel jockey. In November the Abu Dhabi
police rescued two young Pakistani boys, aged 4
and 6, from an Al-Ain camel farm where they had
been forced to work as camel jockeys. The
boys allegedly were kidnapped from Pakistan
earlier in the year and transported illegally to
the country through Iran on forged passports.
Upon arrival in the country they reportedly were
sold to a Pakistani agent for $5,500. In
1999 authorities, acting on information provided
by the Pakistani Embassy, located and repatriated
an 8-year-old Pakistani boy who allegedly had been
kidnaped to work as a camel jockey. Also in
1999, a 4-year-old boy from Bangladesh who had
been used as a camel jockey was found wandering in
the desert after being abandoned there by his
handlers. In 1998 a local newspaper reported
the hospitalization of a 5-year-old, 44-pound,
abandoned Bangladeshi child who had been used as a
jockey and whose leg had been broken by a camel
(see Sections 5, 6.c., and 6.d.).
In 1993 the Government prohibited the use of
children under the age of 15 as camel jockeys and
of jockeys who do not weigh more than 99 pounds.
The Camel Racing Association is responsible for
enforcing these rules. However, few jockeys
meet these requirements and relevant labor laws,
while sometimes enforced against the criminal
trafficking rings, are not invoked against those
who own racing camels and employ the children,
because such owners come from powerful local
families that are in effect above the law (see
Sections 5, 6.c., and 6.d.).
Although no accurate statistics are available,
substantial numbers of women appear to be arriving
from the states of the former Soviet Union for
temporary stays, during which they engage in
prostitution and possibly other activities
connected with organized crime. Substantial
numbers of prostitutes also appear to come from
Africa and Central and South Asia. While the
vast majority of these women are in the country
voluntarily, there are credible reports that some
women from Central Europe and Central and South
Asia, who are brought to the country for service
sector employment, later are forced into
prostitution. It is unclear whether this
activity is conducted with the full knowledge of
the women's citizen sponsors, or whether the
women's generally noncitizen agents are exploiting
the sponsorship system to engage in illicit
activity (see Section 5).
In May three Central European women claimed that
they were recruited to come work in the country in
the hotel business. However, upon their
arrival, their local sponsor seized their
passports and locked them in a villa with iron
gates on the windows. The women claim that
they then were forced to work as prostitutes.
The three women eventually escaped and obtained
protection at their country's embassy in Abu
Dhabi. They remained under their embassy's
protection for approximately 1 month, after which
their passports were returned and they were
permitted to depart the country.
The Kazakhstan Government reported in June that it
broke up a trafficking ring that specialized in
sending women to the UAE for prostitution.
Five members of the ring were arrested while
trying to board a woman and a 15-year-old girl on
a flight to Dubai.
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