Abu Dhabi Sheiks Sheik Issa bin Zayed Al Nahyan TORTURE SHEIK UAE

SHOCKER IN ABU DHABI: TORTURE SHEIK FOUND NOT GUILTY…….!

Sheik Issa bin Zayed Al Nahyan: Point the camera from that direction in order to get the full extent of my diminished capacity.

Blogger TINSC alerts the Tundra Tabloids to the latest buffoonery in Abu Dhabi, as the brother of the crown prince of the UAE, Sheik Issa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, now known as the torture sheik, gets a “get out of jail free card” from an Abu Dhabi Judge, Mubarak al-Awad. Here’s a CNN video report of the sadistic bastard:

NOTE: Pay attention to the end of video in when the CNN crew place a lot of emphasis on the fact that the Abu Dhabi government released a press release stating their intention to reinvestigate the case. The verdict however was known well before the police started their “reinvestigation” and the trial began. That these CNN boobs hyped the UAE’s press release shows how stupidly ignorant these media types are. Oh, and they had an “expert” on the ME along with them, Octavia Nasr.

AL AIN, United Arab Emirates (Al-AP) – A member of the United Arab Emirates’ ruling family on trial in connection with the videotaped beating of an Afghan man was cleared of all charges Sunday.
Judge Mubarak al-Awad acquitted Sheik Issa bin Zayed Al Nahyan of all charges in a UAE criminal court in the oasis city of Al Ain. The charges against Issa, a half brother of the country’s president, included endangering a life, causing bodily harm and rape.
A security guard who was seen on the video assisting the sheik with the beating also was acquitted.
It was the first time that a member of the ruling family of this wealthy Gulf Arab nation had been put on trial, but human rights groups were quick to criticize Issa’s acquittal.
The trial began in October, providing a rare public spectacle in the Emirates, where transgressions of the ruling elite are typically dealt with behind closed doors and according to tribal customs.
Issa, who has been in custody for eight months, attended Sunday’s hearing. He wore a traditional white robe and headscarf and was not handcuffed or restrained. On hearing the verdict, he hugged his defense lawyer, Habib al-Mullah, and left the courtroom without speaking to reporters.
Al-Awad, who presided over a three-judge panel, said Issa was innocent since he was in a state of “diminished liability” during the videotaped 2004 incident in Abu Dhabi’s eastern desert.
The judge gave no other explanation for the ruling when he read the court’s verdict.
The tape caused international outrage when it was broadcast by a U.S. television station last year. Since then, it has also appeared on the Internet, showing a suspect, identified as Issa, viciously beating a man said to be an Afghan worker and firing an automatic weapon into the sand around him.
Emirates’ authorities have previously confirmed the man in the videotape was Issa. During the trial, Issa’s lawyer never denied that it was his client on the tape.
The defense also argued that the 40-year-old sheik was not responsible for his actions at the time because he was left disoriented and impaired by a combination of drugs, including medicine for heart and back conditions.
Issa’s lawyers submitted a list of drugs the sheik was taking. The list was never made public, but in December a forensic expert, called by the defense, told the court the mix of drugs Issa had consumed could cause “anger, suicidal tendencies, depression, aggression and loss of memory.”
“We are happy the court ruled in line with our defense and evidence we submitted,” Issa’s lawyer, Habib al-Mullah, told reporters after Sunday’s verdict.
Samer Muscati, a UAE researcher with the New York-based Human Rights Watch, said the verdict was shocking given the severity of the beating shown on the videotape.
“Although Sheik Issa’s prosecution is a positive step, a different verdict was expected,” he said.
The victim, identified as Afghan grain dealer Mohammed Shapoor, survived the beatings and attended Sunday’s court session. He left the courtroom immediately after the verdict was announced and his lawyer did not answer calls by The Associated Press seeking comment.

2 Responses

  1. I think this fellow deserves some sort of "Dialogue Prize" for talking himself out of this predicament…

  2. Having a crown prince as a bro goes a long way. Western cash should be stopped from flowing into the UAE.

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