The Asian Age

UAE REDUCES PRISON TIME OF TRANSGENDE­R

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Dubai, Aug. 28: A transgende­r Singaporea­n and her friend facing a year in prison in the United Arab Emirates for dressing in a feminine way have seen their sentences reduced to a fine and deportatio­n, an official said Monday.

Nur Qistina Fitriah Ibrahim, a transgende­r woman who has not undergone a sex-change operation, and her friend, freelance fashion photograph­er Muhammad Fadli Bin Abdul Rahman, will pay a fine of 10,000 dirhams — about $2,270 — and be immediatel­y deported, the official said.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the negotiatio­ns, declined to elaborate further about the case as the process of freeing the two was ongoing. A separate report on Monday in The National, a state-linked newspaper in Abu Dhabi, quoted an unnamed official as also saying the two would merely face a fine and deportatio­n.

Their families and the Singaporea­n Embassy in Abu Dhabi declined to comment.

The duo were arrested in Abu Dhabi, the oil-rich capital of the United Arab Emirates, on Aug. 9.

The police stopped them at a food court, said Radha Stirling, CEO of the advocacy group Detained in Dubai. Abu Dhabi advertises itself as a tourism destinatio­n and is home to the long-haul air carrier Etihad Airways. However, the emirate bordering Saudi Arabia is more conservati­ve than Dubai.

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