Most visitors, residents and investors picture the UAE's courts the way they picture their own: slow, perhaps, but neutral. That assumption is the trap. In Dubai and the wider UAE, the United Nations has found the judiciary to sit under the de facto control of the executive, and a well-connected opponent can use the system itself against you. The point is rarely to reach a fair verdict. It is to apply pressure: to detain you, freeze you, ban you from leaving, and make it as hard as possible for you to fight back.
A business dispute that becomes a criminal case
In many countries a disagreement over money, a contract, an unpaid commission or a failed venture is a civil matter. In the UAE it can be turned into a criminal one. A former partner or employer with local influence can trigger a police complaint, and suddenly the person on the wrong end is not defending a lawsuit but facing arrest, interrogation and possible jail. The threat of criminal exposure becomes leverage to force a settlement on the accuser's terms.
Bounced cheques and debts
For years, a bounced cheque in the UAE was not just a debt but a crime, and thousands of foreigners were jailed over post-dated cheques used as ordinary business security. Reforms that took effect in 2022 decriminalised many bounced-cheque cases and moved them toward civil enforcement. The risk has not disappeared: debts can still lead to travel bans, asset seizures and, where fraud or other offences are alleged, criminal proceedings. Assume that a commercial debt in the UAE can still put your liberty and your ability to leave the country at risk.
Cybercrime and slander: criticism as a crime
The UAE's cybercrime law makes it a criminal offence to insult, defame or cause "reputational harm" online. A negative review, a complaint, a social media post about a dispute, even a message sent in frustration, can become the basis of a slander charge carrying heavy fines, imprisonment and deportation. Human Rights Watch has documented the law being used against a person in a business dispute, warning that it lets people "have their partners locked up when they don't like the tone of their tweets." What you would consider free speech at home can be a crime there.
Freezing orders and asset weapons
Civil litigation has its own pressure points. A freezing order, sometimes called the "nuclear option" of litigation, can tie up a person's bank accounts and assets before anything has been proven. Its effect can be to strip the target of the very means to hire lawyers and mount a defence, which is often the real aim. Orders of this kind can also be asserted long after they should have lapsed, leaving a person fighting to establish that a measure against them is no longer even in force.
Pre-trial detention and travel bans
Two further tools turn time itself into a weapon. A person can be held in pre-trial detention for months while hearings are repeatedly postponed, or left at liberty but trapped by a travel ban that prevents them leaving the country until a dispute is resolved. Either way, the pressure mounts: legal costs climb, work and family are left behind, and settling on the opponent's terms starts to look like the only way out.
The reach beyond the border: Interpol
The pressure does not stop at the UAE's borders. The Emirates has been found to misuse Interpol's Red Notice system to pursue people who have already left, over the very same commercial disputes and bounced cheques, so that a person can be arrested on the other side of the world. Dubai Watch has covered this in detail. See our alert, Weaponising Interpol: the UAE's abuse of Red Notices.
Why it works
The system works as a weapon because it is opaque and because it is not fully independent. In 2015 the UN Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers expressed concern that the UAE's "judicial system remains under the de facto control of the executive branch of government." Proceedings are conducted in Arabic; foreign defendants frequently cannot see or understand the evidence against them, and may be unable to give evidence or cross-examine witnesses. For someone unfamiliar with the system, and without a powerful local ally, the odds are stacked from the start.
Case in point
Dubai Watch co-founder David Haigh knows this pattern at first hand. Held for 22 months in Dubai, he faced a cybercrime slander charge over tweets in a business dispute, and a freezing order was deployed against him. Every claim was ultimately dismissed by the English and DIFC courts. The latest.
What this means for you
If you have a business interest, a debt, a contract, a partnership or even an unresolved argument in the UAE, you should understand that the other side may be able to reach for the criminal courts, the civil courts, an asset freeze, a travel ban or an Interpol notice, and that the process itself is the punishment. You do not have to have done anything wrong to be caught up in it.
How to protect yourself
- Take specialist advice before you travel if you have ever had a legal, financial or business dispute in the UAE.
- Treat commercial debts and cheques as potential criminal and travel-ban risks, not just civil ones.
- Be extremely careful what you post, review or message about any UAE person or company, even from abroad. Criticism can be prosecuted as a crime.
- Never sign blank or open-ended cheques or guarantees as "security" in a UAE deal.
- Keep full records of every contract, judgment, payment and item of correspondence.
- If a dispute is brewing, get advice early on travel bans, asset exposure and Interpol before matters escalate.
If you think you are affected
Dubai Watch and its founders have deep experience of UAE criminal and civil proceedings, travel bans, asset freezes and abusive Interpol notices. Contact us in confidence at info@dubaiwatch.org.
Sources: Human Rights Watch, "UAE: British Businessman Faces Cybercrime Charges" (7 March 2016); UN Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers (2015); Undue Influence: The UAE and Interpol (Sir David Calvert-Smith, assisted by Rhys Davies and Ben Keith, 2021); UAE bounced-cheque reforms effective January 2022. Compiled by Dubai Watch. This alert is information, not legal advice.