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British Woman Charged in Dubai Faces Firing Squad

A British TikTok influencer is facing a possible firing squad if convicted of murder in Dubai after allegedly stabbing a man to death in what she claims was an act of self-defence, according to an advocacy group supporting her case.

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Brooke George, 23, a former department store worker from Kent, has been charged with the premeditated murder of a 26-year-old man she met through Facebook, according to Detained in Dubai (DiD). The advocacy group says she could face execution by firing squad if found guilty under UAE law.

Online Romance Ends in Tragedy

According to DiD, George travelled to Dubai after developing an online relationship with the man. During her first week-long visit, she described the trip as "the time of my life," despite later raising concerns about a professional photo shoot she said had been arranged during her stay.

On June 1, George shared photos and videos from Dubai on Instagram with the caption: "God has a plan. Trust it, Live it, Enjoy it."

DiD said the relationship deteriorated during her second visit. The group, citing George's account, said the man became increasingly controlling and abusive. George allegedly told friends that "things weren't right" and claimed she discovered disturbing videos on his computer.

The group also said George became alarmed after learning that only a one-way ticket had been booked for her return journey, prompting her to make plans to leave the country.

Self-Defence Claim

DiD said the incident occurred after the pair returned from an Irish bar, where the man had been drinking. George alleges he assaulted her in the car and continued the attack after they reached his apartment.

Her family said she called them in distress after being struck by the man, and they arranged a flight back to Britain. According to DiD, when George returned to collect her belongings and passport, she found her possessions scattered around the apartment.

The group said George pleaded for the return of her passport before she was punched in the face and attacked again. She claims she feared for her life and grabbed a nearby kitchen knife, fatally stabbing the man in self-defence.

George's mother, Thereza George, said her daughter had appeared quieter than usual the day before the incident but had not explained why. After the alleged stabbing, she said Brooke was crying uncontrollably and had a badly swollen eye.

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Picture courtesy of Brooke George's Instagram

Allegations Over Detention

George was arrested in the early hours of June 22 and is being held at Bur Dubai police station.

Detained in Dubai alleges she was forced to strip naked in front of male police officers without female officers present. The group also claims she has not been allowed to contact the British embassy and was required to give statements without legal representation.

Dubai Police and the UAE Embassy did not immediately respond to a request from CBS News for comment on the allegations.

A spokesperson for the UK's Foreign Office said it was in contact with the detained British woman, supporting her family and liaising with local authorities.

Calls for Fair Trial

DiD chief executive Radha Stirling said the case raises concerns about violence against women, the right to self-defence, due process and the treatment of British nationals detained overseas.

The organisation is calling for George to receive a fair trial and be released on bail while the investigation continues.

Stirling also said an increasing number of women, including influencers, models and travellers, have been lured to Dubai with promises of luxury lifestyles, paid work, holidays or romantic relationships before later alleging exploitation, coercion, violence or degrading treatment.

The group pointed to previous cases involving foreign women, including Irish national Tori Towey, who was detained in 2024 after attempting to flee alleged domestic abuse.

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Adapted by ASEAN Now. Source 26 June 2026

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JonnyF Star Member

JonnyF

Advanced Member

Shame. She's pretty fit.

Thick as mince though.

save the frogs Star Member

save the frogs

Advanced Member
9 minutes ago, unblocktheplanet said:

Capital punishment is just the state's revenge, bringing no real closure.

I dont want to debate capital punishment.

But they should make it as humane as possible.

Firing squad ... Maybe sedate them first? I don't know.

Roman Empire used crucifixition (how do you spell that?).

Takes 3 days of intense torture to die on a cross.

Those were nasty SOBs those Romans.

rocketboy2 Gold Member

rocketboy2

Advanced Member
2 minutes ago, save the frogs said:

Romans used crucifixition (how do you spell that?).

Takes 3 days of intense torture to die on a cross.

Those were nasty SOBs those Romans.

Yes, bloody Romans.

What did they ever do for us.

Anyone. ?

save the frogs Star Member

save the frogs

Advanced Member
4 minutes ago, rocketboy2 said:

Yes, bloody Romans.

What did they ever do for us.

Anyone. ?

They gave us Jesus --- unintentionally and inadvertently.

mikeymike100 Platinum Member

mikeymike100

Advanced Member
20 hours ago, MikeandDow said:

What you stated is correct BUT this was manslaughter! Excessive Force: If you used more force than was reasonably necessary to protect yourself (e.g., using a deadly weapon against an unarmed attacker), the justification may be voided, potentially leading to a manslaughter charge.

I agree with your sentiment., ie Excessive Force.

We don't know what really happened, we only have the woman's side of the argument, in that she was attacked in the apartment.

"George pleaded for the return of her passport before she was punched in the face and attacked again. She claims she feared for her life and grabbed a nearby kitchen knife, fatally stabbing the man in self-defence"

So we have a man attacking a woman, she was punched in the face and had evidence of that?

So assuming that the man was stronger than this woman, she could be fearing for her life?

It's up to the court in Dubai, but no jury in there so. i think you are right she will get a manslaughter verdict!

Off Piste Silver Member

Off Piste

Advanced Member

For her to be able to kill him with a knife, I think he would need to be asleep..............

James105 Platinum Member

James105

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, unblocktheplanet said:

As have gas chambers (why were they gone?) , hangings and certainly lethal injections.

The anticipation is far worse than dying. We're not supposed to know when we're going to die.

Capital punishment is just the state's revenge, bringing no real closure.

Not really if you ponder the following 2 questions...

How many convicted murderers released from jail have gone on to kill again? Answer. Lots

How many convicted murderers who were executed have gone on to kill again? Answer: Zero.

It is really just the state doing its duty to protect its citizens from further harm. It should be brought back. A bullet to the head or the heart is a cheap, efficient approach. Not sure why there needs to be any more ceremony than that.

Photoguy21 Platinum Member

Photoguy21

Advanced Member
On 6/28/2026 at 5:30 PM, MikeandDow said:

And you are assuming she planned this! which is doubtful!! when you go to another country you don't expect to be punched in the face and assaulted

Not in the least am I assuming that. What I am assuming is that people on here are umping to conclusions when they have no idea of what really took place.

ravip Star Member

ravip

Advanced Member
On 6/27/2026 at 12:42 PM, James105 said:

Top tip for women and gay people. Do not, under any circumstances, visit a muslim controlled country. Unless of course you want to learn a very harsh lesson on how an actual homophobic ethno-nationalist patriarchy operates. In which case, fill your boots.

How about trying an Asphyxiation stunt in Dubai or Saudi Arabia?

Sigmund Gold Member

Sigmund

Advanced Member

A good reminder to all those who enjoy displaying their Bxxbs and hair extensions online...that the Gulf nations are no place to fool around...and remain islamic ruled nations no matter all the westernising propaganda.

mikeymike100 Platinum Member

mikeymike100

Advanced Member
17 hours ago, Sigmund said:

A good reminder to all those who enjoy displaying their Bxxbs and hair extensions online...that the Gulf nations are no place to fool around...and remain islamic ruled nations no matter all the westernising propaganda.

Yes, In Dubai it seems quite normal on the face of it.

In the super luxury shopping malls you see women in shorty shorts, at the same time you see a local man with his 4 wives dressed from head to foot in black, its surreal. The hotels all have bars and some clubs etc, it all seems fun until you step over the line, then you are back to reality.

Photoguy21 Platinum Member

Photoguy21

Advanced Member
On 6/30/2026 at 12:24 PM, Off Piste said:

For her to be able to kill him with a knife, I think he would need to be asleep..............

That is speculation. The facts will come out and if she is found guilty then she will get the penalty for her actions.

Photoguy21 Platinum Member

Photoguy21

Advanced Member
On 6/30/2026 at 11:35 AM, unblocktheplanet said:

As have gas chambers (why were they gone?) , hangings and certainly lethal injections.

The anticipation is far worse than dying. We're not supposed to know when we're going to die.

Capital punishment is just the state's revenge, bringing no real closure.

No real closure I agree but it does stop a repeat by the individual.

unblocktheplanet Diamond Member

unblocktheplanet

Advanced Member
2 hours ago, Photoguy21 said:

No real closure I agree but it does stop a repeat by the individual.

Unless he's innocent, of course.

I was musing today that so few women commit serious crimes. They don't shoot up schools, by and large don't murder their abusers, rob banks (since Bonnie) or kidnap people.

What's wrong with those XX chromosomes that they can't find true equality with men. Except, I guess, with armpit hair.

Sigmund Gold Member

Sigmund

Advanced Member
6 hours ago, mikeymike100 said:

Yes, In Dubai it seems quite normal on the face of it.

In the super luxury shopping malls you see women in shorty shorts, at the same time you see a local man with his 4 wives dressed from head to foot in black, its surreal. The hotels all have bars and some clubs etc, it all seems fun until you step over the line, then you are back to reality.

Yes as I have never seen such a boobFest with all display of cleavage as in Dubai. Mostly by the regular bunch of shameless western females. Rather a lack of elementary respect towards a nation that does remain conservative, no matter what they try the world to believe.

Bday Prang Star Member

Bday Prang

Advanced Member
On 6/27/2026 at 4:31 PM, Keeps said:

Before I even got to the above part of your post I automatically thought 'Irish Pikey'.

Same here but what I actually thought was " pikey scum"

nauseus Star Member

nauseus

Advanced Member
On 6/26/2026 at 5:06 PM, unblocktheplanet said:

Where's the hand 'em high brigade???

playin poker

mikeymike100 Platinum Member

mikeymike100

Advanced Member
18 hours ago, Photoguy21 said:

That is speculation. The facts will come out and if she is found guilty then she will get the penalty for her actions.

She may indeed get the penalty, as you say, but will she get justice?

ravip Star Member

ravip

Advanced Member
On 6/27/2026 at 8:46 AM, Smokey and the Bandit said:

I notice the 'consular office ' is involved, but they wont be much help?

The UAE is a major investor in the UK (hundreds of billions in real estate, finance, football clubs, etc.).

Dubai and Abu Dhabi are key partners for British business, arms deals, and geopolitical interests.

The UK government is usually very careful not to aggressively criticize the UAE on human rights or individual cases.......Money TALKS!!☹️

Great expectations.

Hope this applies to all human beings accused of murder on this planet.

Or any reason for exceptions?

Photoguy21 Platinum Member

Photoguy21

Advanced Member
26 minutes ago, mikeymike100 said:

She may indeed get the penalty, as you say, but will she get justice?

If it is shown that she murdered him then yes she will.

mikeymike100 Platinum Member

mikeymike100

Advanced Member
6 hours ago, Photoguy21 said:

If it is shown that she murdered him then yes she will.

From Websters dictionary......."Justice in law refers to the process of using laws to fairly judge cases, redress wrongs, and punish crimes, ensuring that everyone is treated impartially and fairly. It embodies the principle of moral rightness and the administration of law to achieve fairness for all individuals"

In Dubai everyone is not treated impartially.

On paper, the UAE Constitution guarantees equality before the law regardless of race, nationality, or social status. In practice, however, impartiality is heavily influenced by who you are, the nature of the case, and your citizenship status.

The UAE legal system fails to act impartially in Brooke George’s case because it actively stacked the deck for the prosecution through structural bias and a denial of basic due process.

By ignoring her documented facial injuries and immediately filing a one-sided charge of premeditated murder, the authorities completely bypassed a balanced investigation into her claims of domestic abuse and self-defense.

This initial bias was then locked in by interrogating her without a defense lawyer, denying her immediate consular access, and subjecting her to institutional humiliation—all while forcing a traumatized foreign national through high-stakes proceedings conducted entirely in Arabic without adequate translation.

Photoguy21 Platinum Member

Photoguy21

Advanced Member
22 hours ago, mikeymike100 said:

From Websters dictionary......."Justice in law refers to the process of using laws to fairly judge cases, redress wrongs, and punish crimes, ensuring that everyone is treated impartially and fairly. It embodies the principle of moral rightness and the administration of law to achieve fairness for all individuals"

In Dubai everyone is not treated impartially.

On paper, the UAE Constitution guarantees equality before the law regardless of race, nationality, or social status. In practice, however, impartiality is heavily influenced by who you are, the nature of the case, and your citizenship status.

The UAE legal system fails to act impartially in Brooke George’s case because it actively stacked the deck for the prosecution through structural bias and a denial of basic due process.

By ignoring her documented facial injuries and immediately filing a one-sided charge of premeditated murder, the authorities completely bypassed a balanced investigation into her claims of domestic abuse and self-defense.

This initial bias was then locked in by interrogating her without a defense lawyer, denying her immediate consular access, and subjecting her to institutional humiliation—all while forcing a traumatized foreign national through high-stakes proceedings conducted entirely in Arabic without adequate translation.

Name a country where everyone is treated without bias.

mikeymike100 Platinum Member

mikeymike100

Advanced Member
On 7/4/2026 at 2:50 PM, Photoguy21 said:

Name a country where everyone is treated without bias.

There is no country on Earth that treats everyone with absolute, ZERO bias, but some are much better than others

Nordic countries are the best, they consistently top the global rankings for impartiality, fundamental rights, and the absence of corruption.

The UAE functions beautifully as a safe, highly efficient, and low-corruption hub for business and tourism (ranking in the top 20–30 globally for those elements). But when it comes to human rights and checking the power of the state, it ranks among some of the most restrictive nations globally.

So for normal tourists, its a good place to visit, but don't do anything that would get you into trouble!

Photoguy21 Platinum Member

Photoguy21

Advanced Member
22 hours ago, mikeymike100 said:

There is no country on Earth that treats everyone with absolute, ZERO bias, but some are much better than others

Nordic countries are the best, they consistently top the global rankings for impartiality, fundamental rights, and the absence of corruption.

The UAE functions beautifully as a safe, highly efficient, and low-corruption hub for business and tourism (ranking in the top 20–30 globally for those elements). But when it comes to human rights and checking the power of the state, it ranks among some of the most restrictive nations globally.

So for normal tourists, its a good place to visit, but don't do anything that would get you into trouble!

It is only restrictive when compared to Western countries and just look at the state that they are in.

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