The National - News

Dubai resident back with family after arrest in Iraq

- GILLIAN DUNCAN and PATRICK RYAN

A Dubai resident has spoken of his relief after returning home to his family almost a year after being arrested and prevented from leaving Iraq.

Thomas Simpson, 61, was arrested at Basra Internatio­nal Airport last July after flying in for work. He still does not fully understand what he stood accused of, although he knows it relates to a job he had in the country two years ago.

Despite attempts to unravel the issue, Mr Simpson does not know if he was ever formally charged with an offence.

He was however cleared of any wrongdoing by a court in Erbil and allowed to leave on July 3 after a no-fly order was removed.

British authoritie­s told The National they were aware of his case and had been in contact with Mr Simpson.

The court ruling allowed the Scot to fly to Dubai, where he was reunited with his partner Esme, and children Jamie, 16, and Kane, 13.

The moment the plane took off from Erbil was the “most wonderful feeling”, said Mr Simpson, who has lived in Dubai for 13 years.

“Then to meet my kids at the airport was just indescriba­ble,” he said. “We just held each other so tightly for so long. And we all sobbed and came home together and it was just the best feeling.”

Mr Simpson spent three “miserable” days in solitary confinemen­t after being arrested, before his current employer arranged for a lawyer to get him out of prison. He was able to return to his company’s work site, south of Basra.

“I had to remain there for the next 11 months because I couldn’t fly,” he said. “I couldn’t leave. But at least I was working and earning. And I wasn’t in jail any more.”

Mr Simpson said he understand­s his arrest related to a joint venture, an oil storage operation from 2018 to 2019 involving a Lebanese and local Kurdish company, which went sour. He worked as the general manager of the site at the time.

His employer, the Lebanese company, eventually pulled out, after which Mr Simpson was “marched off-site by machine gunpoint”.

That was the last he heard of it, until he was arrested.

“I understand the local Kurdish half thought I must have been involved in the dissolutio­n of the joint venture. I wasn’t,” he said. “I was just there on a purely operationa­l basis to run the facility. That was the most terrifying part of it.

“It was like: ‘Hang on, what have I done wrong? What’s the charge?’ I still have no idea what the charge was.”

Mr Simpson, who went through four lawyers before finding one who was able to help him, was eventually summoned to Erbil by a judge.

“My colleagues, some of whom are quite connected, arranged for me to be driven to Erbil from Basra,” he said.

“They then engaged a security guy who was pretty high up in Basra and he got me through the checkpoint­s just with his own clout.

“Because this is how Iraq works,” he said.

The process was supposed to take days, but stretched to weeks, as he gave evidence and was referred to various government department­s, including police, immigratio­n and other agencies to help clear his name.

“You get a bit of paper off one guy, then you have to proceed to the next stage,” he said.

“There is no system which says ‘Tom is good to go for the next stage’. So that five or six days turned into seven weeks that I spent in a hotel in Erbil.”

He tried to leave the country in late May, but was refused, because the system had not yet been updated to show he had been cleared.

Mr Simpson said he has been in touch with the wife of Robert Pether, an Australian resident of Dubai who has been held in Iraq without charge for 90 days.

“Tom has was in touch to offer help and provide some advice because he knows what we are going through,” Desree Pether said.

“Tom’s had a similar experience to what my husband is going through right now.”

Mr Pether, an engineer, was arrested along with a colleague when he attended what he thought was a routine business meeting with his employer’s client, the Central Bank of Iraq.

It was like: ‘Hang on, what have I done wrong? What’s the charge?’ I still have no idea what the charge was

THOMAS SIMPSON

Oil worker

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 ?? Chris Whiteoak / The National ?? Thomas Simpson has been reunited with his children Jamie, 16, and Kane, 13
Chris Whiteoak / The National Thomas Simpson has been reunited with his children Jamie, 16, and Kane, 13

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