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Homeless in Dubai: How a Successful British Businessman Lost Everything in Dubai

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By Stephen Jones
Epoch Times Staff

July 19, 2010

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates—Once a business development manager but ruined by credit card debt, Nicholas Warner is now one of Dubai’s new homeless.

The 42-year-old British national sleeps every night by Dubai Creek, the emirate’s main waterway, after losing his job, his home, and finally his passport.

“I’m homeless and I’ve got nothing,” Warner told local newspaper 7Days.

“I’m desperate to pay my way but without a passport, I can’t work. I wish they’d just send me to jail so all this could be over with,” he said.

Warner was arrested in January after returning from a Christmas break in Spain. His passport was seized by police after an instruction from banks, and he later lost his job.

Seven months later, Warner’s case has not been taken to the courts, and a repayment plan has not been agreed upon with the bank.

“Now, I think I’d be better off in prison,” he said. “At least I’d have food and a roof over my head and I could do my time and be deported.”

He said he had tried to turn himself in to police, but they told him he was free to go.

“If someone told me last year I’d end up sleeping rough [British slang for sleeping on the street], I wouldn’t have believed them,” he added.

A spokesman for Emirates NBD, the bank Warner had an account with, said that officials had tried to settle the case in an amicable manner.

“The bank had no option but to apply the due process of the law and hand the matter over to the relevant authorities,” the spokesman said.

“Emirates NBD sympathizes with customers who find themselves in a debt default situation, and makes every effort to help them resolve the matter in a manner that is mutually acceptable.”

Defaulting on credit card debt or bouncing a check is a criminal offense in Dubai, and the emirate’s prisons are filled with thousands of white-collar workers.

In February it emerged that Safi Qureshi, a British-born businessman who bought the man-made island of ‘England’ in the offshore ‘World’ development in Dubai, was in jail over a bounced check worth tens of millions of dollars.

However, thousands of cases go by unreported, as the emirate suffers its deepest downturn in its history.

Radha Stirling set up a U.K. charity called ‘Detained in Dubai’ to handle the growing number of expatriates who are facing jail in the emirate over financial crimes.

She said that she now receives around five calls a day from residents facing the threat of jail.

She said that the typical story is that a loss of employment leads to bank accounts being frozen, passports confiscated, and eventually jail.

“They don’t envisage that a default is possible and believe their employment is stable,” she said.

“When they get into trouble, they realize the banks can actually prevent them from obtaining further employment and lead them into a full default.”

Aside from the advice to avoid debt at all costs, Stirling has a warning to those who find themselves in trouble.

“If you lose your job or think there is a chance you won’t be able to meet your commitments, leave the country as a matter of urgency as the results of staying can involve a prison sentence,” she said.

http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/content/view/39439/

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Reader Feedback

2 Responses to “Homeless in Dubai: How a Successful British Businessman Lost Everything in Dubai”

  1. Charles Allsopp says:

    The reason that defaulting is most definitely illegal, is that defaulting is one step beyond being a debtor. This gentleman has been left like this because countless scores of Westerners took liberties; some quite funny. For instance, before departing Dubai for good, if you have a Hire Purchase agreement on a car (often 4×4), don’t leave it at the airport – get a friend to follow you into the desert and abandon the car near a significant sand-dune – to make it “disappear”. Arabs are very fair people and very generous people, and all I can say is I hope this man made enough money from his news article to somehow locate the British Embassy in Abu Dhabi and head home.

  2. Bud Hirayama says:

    Only a quickly hello also to we appreciate you talking about your opinions about this page.

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