A 23-year-old TikTok influencer charged with the murder of her boyfriend in Dubai is facing death by firing squad, a human rights group has said.
Brooke George, from Gravesend, Kent, has been charged over the stabbing of a man she was in a relationship with after they met online, advocacy group Detained in Dubai said.
The group said she claimed she grabbed a knife in self defence during a violent attack by her partner in the UAE. The organisation called for her to be released on bail and for the case to be dealt with as domestic violence.
The Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office said it was supporting a British woman detained in the UAE and her family.
Former John Lewis worker George was arrested in the early hours of June 22 and charged with premeditated murder. She faces execution under UAE laws if convicted.
While being held at Bur Dubai Police Station, she has alleged being forced to strip naked in front of male officers, without a female officer present, which she said was “deeply humiliating and distressing,” Detained in Dubai said.
On her first visit to Dubai, George had described it as “the time of my life.” But, according to Radha Stirling, chief executive of Detained in Dubai, the relationship became abusive on their second trip to the Gulf city.
Stirling said George claimed her partner became “increasingly controlling and abusive” and she was trying to leave Dubai after he allegedly punched her, withheld her passport and then attacked her again at their apartment. She claimed she “feared for her life and, reaching for a kitchen knife within her grasp, acted in self defence,” Stirling added.
In a statement, her mother, Thereza George, said: “After Brooke returned to Dubai for the second time, the dynamic between them had clearly changed. The day before the incident, she did not seem like herself. She was quieter and not her usual happy, cheerful self, but she did not tell me why.”
“That evening they went to a bar in Dubai. When I spoke to Brooke right after the incident, she was absolutely terrified. I have never seen my daughter so frightened in my life. She was crying uncontrollably. I could see that one of her eyes was badly swollen and was beginning to close.”
She added she was “deeply concerned” for her daughter’s welfare. “The daughter I spoke to that night was utterly terrified. I firmly believe she was desperately trying to get home and away from whatever had happened to her.”
Detained in Dubai said George had not been given access to her embassy and had to make statements without a lawyer present. The case “raises serious concerns about violence against women, the right to self-defence, due process and the treatment of British nationals detained overseas,” Stirling said.
“We are calling for Brooke to be released on bail pending the outcome of the investigation. The UAE has a well-documented history of criminalising and revictimising women who report violence,” she added.
