Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Ex-wife’s comment lands her in custody

- By Jennifer Hassan

LONDON — In 2016, a British woman discovered that her ex-husband of 18 years had remarried after seeing photos of the new couple on Facebook. Angered, she posted comments in her native Farsi, branding him an “idiot” and his new wife a “horse.”

Now, the mother faces a three-year jail sentence in Dubai and a fine of up to $65,000.

The case of Laleh Shahravesh, 55, and the old social media posts that have come back to haunt her has gripped Britain in recent days, turning attention to the United Arab Emirates’ strict laws and the penalties those traveling there can face.

According to a human rights organizati­on called Detained In Dubai, Shahravesh was arrested March 10 at Dubai’s airport after flying in with her teenage daughter Paris to attend the funeral of her Portuguese ex-husband, Pedro Manuel Coreia Dos Santos, who is also her daughter’s father.

Shahravesh and Dos Santos had lived together for eight months in Dubai, where he worked for a bank, before she returned to Britain in 2016 with their daughter. Dos Santos was residing in Dubai with his second wife at the time of the March 3 heart attack that killed him.

Despite posting her Facebook comments while on British soil, she is now awaiting trial in Dubai for breaking a cybercrime law by publishing the insults.

According to the organizati­on, the Facebook comments were reported to Dubai police by the new partner of Shahravesh’s ex-husband.

“I hope you go under the ground you idiot. Damn you. You left me for this horse,” read one of the gibes.

Talking to the BBC about Shahravesh’s wellbeing, Radha Stirling, chief executive of Detained in Dubai, said: “Her emotional state is terrible, really. The whole family is suffering tremendous­ly as a result of this.”

Since her mother was arrested in Dubai, Paris Shahravesh, 14, returned home to the United Kingdom and has been campaignin­g for her mother’s release. “I ask kindly: please, please return my mother’s passport, and let her come home,” the teen wrote in an emotional letter to the ruler of Dubai.

British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt expressed his concern for Shahravesh, adding that she “is getting the best possible service” from British diplomats.

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