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NEWS
In Rape Case, a French Youth Takes
On Dubai By THANASSIS CAMBANIS
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates, Oct. 31 — Alexandre Robert, a French
15-year-old, was having a fine summer in this tourist paradise on the
Persian Gulf. It was Bastille Day and he and a classmate had escaped the
July heat at the beach for an air-conditioned arcade. Just after sunset,
Alex says he was rushing to meet his father for dinner when he bumped
into an acquaintance, a 17-year-old native-born student at the American
school, who said he and his cousin could drop Alex off at home.
There were, in fact, three Emirati men in the car, including a pair of
former convicts ages 35 and 18, according to Alex. He says they drove
him past his house and into a dark patch of desert, between a row of new
villas and a power plant, took away his cellphone, threatened him with a
knife and a club, and told him they would kill his family if he ever
reported them. Then they stripped off his pants and one by one sodomized
him in the back seat of the car. They dumped Alex across from one of
Dubai’s luxury hotel towers.
Alex and his family were about to learn that despite Dubai’s status as
the Arab world’s paragon of modernity and wealth, and its well-earned
reputation for protecting foreign investors, its criminal legal system
remains a perilous gantlet when it comes to homosexuality and protection
of foreigners.
The authorities not only discouraged Alex from pressing charges, he, his
family and French diplomats say; they raised the possibility of charging
him with criminal homosexual activity, and neglected for weeks to inform
him or his parents that one of his attackers had tested H.I.V. positive
while in prison four years earlier.
“They tried to smother this story,” Alex said by phone from Switzerland,
where he fled a month into his 10th-grade school year, fearing a jail
term in Dubai if charged with homosexual activity. “Dubai, they say we
build the highest towers, they have the best hotels. But all the news,
they hide it. They don’t want the world to know that Dubai still lives
in the Middle Ages.”
Alex and his parents say they chose to go public with his case in the
hope that it would press the authorities to prosecute the men.
United Arab Emirates law does not recognize rape of males, only a crime
called “forced homosexuality.” The two adult men charged with sexually
assaulting Alex have pleaded not guilty, although sperm from all three
were found in Alex. The two adults appeared in court on Wednesday and
were appointed a lawyer. They face trial before a three-judge panel on
Nov. 7. The third, a minor, will be tried in juvenile court. Legal
experts here say that men convicted of sexually assaulting other men
usually serve sentences ranging from a few months to two years.
Dubai is a bustling financial and tourist center, one of seven states
that form the United Arab Emirates. At least 90 percent of the residents
of Dubai are not Emirati citizens and many say that Alex’s Kafkaesque
legal journey brings into sharp relief questions about unequal treatment
of foreigners here that have long been quietly raised among the
expatriate majority. The case is getting coverage in the local press.
It also highlights the taboos surrounding H.I.V. and homosexuality that
Dubai residents say have allowed rampant harassment of gays and have
encouraged the health system to treat H.I.V. virtually in secret. (Under
Emirates law, foreigners with H.I.V., or those convicted of homosexual
activity, are deported.)
Prosecutors here reject such accusations. “The legal and judicial system
in the United Arab Emirates makes no distinction between nationals and
non-nationals,” said Khalifa Rashid Bin Demas, head of the Dubai
attorney general’s technical office, in an interview. “All residents are
treated equally.”
Dubai’s economic miracle — decades of double-digit growth spurred by
investors, foreign companies, and workers drawn to the tax-free Emirates
— depends on millions of foreigners, working jobs from construction to
senior positions in finance. Even many of the criminal court lawyers are
foreigners.
Alex’s case has raised diplomatic tensions between the Emirates and
France, which has lodged official complaints about the apparent cover-up
of one assailant’s H.I.V. status and other irregularities. The tension
and growing publicity over the case seem to have prompted the
authorities to take action.
Mr. Demas, from the Dubai attorney general’s office, said he had no
intention of prosecuting Alex and was seeking the death penalty for the
two adult attackers. “This crime is an outrage against society,” he
said.
However, the investigation file in Alex’s case and a pair of
confidential French diplomatic cables obtained by The New York Times
confirm the accounts of inexplicable and at times hostile official
behavior described by Alex and his parents. “The grave deficiencies or
incoherence of the investigation appear to result, in part, from gross
incompetence of the services involved in the United Arab Emirates, but
also from the moral, pseudoscientific and political prejudices which
undoubtedly influenced the inquiry,” the French ambassador to the United
Arab Emirates wrote in a confidential cable dated Sept. 6.
Most infuriating to Alex and his mother, Véronique Robert, is that
police inaccurately informed French diplomats on Aug. 15, a month after
the assault, that the three attackers were disease-free, the diplomats
say. Only at the end of August did the family learn that that the
36-year-old assailant was H.I.V. positive. The case file contains a
positive H.I.V. test for the convict dated March 26, 2003. “They lied to
us,” Ms. Robert said. “Now the Damocles sword of AIDS hangs over Alex.”
So far the teenager has not tested positive for H.I.V., but he will not
know for sure until January, when he gets another blood test six months
after the exposure. A doctor examined Alex the night of the rape, taking
swabs of DNA for traces of the rapists’ sperm. He did not take blood
tests or examine Alex with a speculum. Then he cleared the room and told
Alex: “I know you’re a homosexual. You can admit it to me. I can tell.”
Alex told his father in tears: “I’ve just been raped by three men, and
he’s saying I’m a homosexual,” according to interviews with both of
them.
The doctor, an Egyptian, wrote in his legal report that he had found no
evidence of forced penetration, which Alex’s family says is a false
assessment that could hurt the case against the assailants. In early
September, after the family learned about the older attacker’s H.I.V.
status and the French government lodged complaints with the United Arab
Emirates authorities, the Dubai attorney general’s office assigned a new
prosecutor to the case. Only then were forensic tests performed to
confirm that sperm from all three attackers had been found in Alex.
Alex stayed in Dubai in order to testify against his attackers, and went
back to school in September, despite suffering unsettling flashbacks. In
early October, however, the family said, their lawyer warned Alex that
he was in danger of facing charges of homosexuality and a prison term of
one year.
Veteran lawyers here say the justice system is evolving, like the
country’s entire system of governance that has blossomed as the economy
and population have exploded in just a few decades. Despite its
shortfalls, the United Arab Emirates have combined Islamic values with
the best practices from the West to create “the most modern legal system
among the Arab countries,” said Salim Al Shaali, a former police officer
and prosecutor who now practices criminal law.
In business and finance, the nation has worked hard to earn a reputation
for impartial and speedy justice. But the criminal justice system has
struggled, balancing a penal code rooted in conservative Arab and
Islamic local culture, applied to an overwhelming non-Arab population of
foreign residents.
A 42-year-old gay businessman who would speak only if identified by his
nickname, Ko, described routine sexual harassment by officials during
his 13 years living in Dubai. He cut his shoulder-length hair to avoid
attention, he said, but after years of living in fear of jail or
deportation, he is leaving the country.
Although rape victims here generally keep quiet, some who have been
raped in Dubai have shared testimonials in recent days on
boycottdubai.com, a Web site started by Alex’s mother. Prosecutors moved
forward with the case against her son’s attackers only as a result of
public pressure and diplomatic complaints, Ms. Robert believes. Now, she
hopes, the attention could prompt more humane and even-handed justice
for future rape victims here.
On advice of his lawyer and French diplomats, Alex says he will not
return to Dubai but wants very much for the men to be convicted.
“Sometimes you feel crazy, you know?” he said. “It’s hard, but we have
to be strong. I’m doing this for all the other poor kids who got raped
and couldn’t do anything about it.”
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