By MAMAMIA TEAM
“Did you call the police because you didn’t like it?”
That’s what a police officer in the United Arab Emirates asked 24-year-old Marte Deborah Dalelv when she called to report a rape. And instantly, Dalelv knew the police did not believe her story.
It was March of this year that the Norwegian citizen, who had been working for two years at an interior design firm in the neighbouring country of Qatar, was allegedly raped by a colleague after a night out in Dubai.
Dalelv alleges that she asked her colleague to walk her to her hotel room at around 3am. When the pair were in a hotel corridor, the man pulled Dalely into a room which was not her own.
“He dragged me by my purse in, so I thought, ‘OK, I just need to calm the situation down. I will finish my bottle of water, I will sit here and then I will excuse myself and say I feel fine,'” Dalelv recently told United States broadcaster CNN.
The next thing she knew, Dalelv was naked and lying on her front and the man was raping her.
After she managed to make it downstairs to the hotel lobby, Dalelv did what she would have done if the crime had taken place in her home country: she called the police.
“That is what you do. We are trained on that from when we are very young,” she told CNN.
But here’s the thing. In her home country of Norway, calling the police to report a crime like a rape is expected.
Top Comments
Doubtless they are a backward bunch in the UAE and imprisoning people for having consensual sex is a stupid law but reading the facts it seems she was imprisoned for 1) drinking alcohol 2) having consensual sex outside marriage (which is what she told police - don't disbelieve she was raped but she told the police the sex was consensual) and 3) making a false statement about rape which is a crime here albeit one that hardly ever leads to imprisonment. It's by no means clear that if she'd maintained her claim of rape that she would have been imprisoned and I think more evidence needed to claim this is the case.
There is misinformation in this story (and a lot of the comments). While this is an awful story and unfortunately not a lone story it is wrong to report that the UAE works solely under Sharia law. There are many, many rape cases where the woman is not blamed and the male attacker/s is sentenced for a long time (often 10 years). These case have not required male Muslim witnesses. Your writer or fact checker need only look at online news services to see this. Rape and sexual asault cases are tried often and the verdict going in favour of the victim. Yes, this is a very unfortunate case but to say that it is the standard is completely wrong. Yes, there is still a long way to go in protecting and advocating victim rights, and cases like this highlight that, but the way your story was written makes the whole system sound rotten (which it isn't) and helps to foster the old us versus "backward Muslim" stance so popular in Australia.
Please take a little time to check your facts before publishing.
I would ask Check your facts to check their facts The following link looks at the high rape scale in Saudi Arabia http://womanstats.wordpress...
Rape and sexual assault cases do not appear to be tried often and the verdict does not appear to go in favour of the victim. Apparently there were 59 reported rapes, yes only 59! for a population of 26,,584, 504 in Saudi Arabia for 2002; The United Arab Emirates does not have womens rights like we do here in Australia
A Filippino maid was lashed 100 times for being raped in Saudi Arabia , as well as imprisoned. Mistreatment and punishment of rape victims is not a one off in Saudi Arabia. http://trueslant.com/nealun...
Saudi Arabia and the UAE are two different countries. They may be neighbours but they are very different.
Saudi Arabia is NOT the UAE, so I don't see how your stats are relevant to this story or my comment. I stand by what I wrote that there are many rape cases tried in the UAE that favour the victim, I can think of two recent (as in the past week) cases. As I said jump online and read some UAE newspapers.
Things are very different in Saudi Arabia so its not really comparable. No, women aren't always treated equitably in the UAE and there is a long, long way to go, but the UAE is more liberal and progressive than Saudi Arabia.
Can I point out that its not uncommon for men to also go to jail in the UAE for sex outside of marriage. The woman in this case was wrongly advised to confess to consensual sex outside of marriage (which is what she was charged with) when she should have stuck to her rape claim. She admits herself that was biggest mistake. There is a good chance she would not have been charged if she had.