Skip to main content
News |

Abu Dhabi deports Australian for 'insulting' Facebook post

Jodi Magi, 39, said she had been shackled at the ankles, strip-searched, blood tested and forced to sleep on a concrete floor without a mattress
File photo shows UAE skyline
By AFP

An Australian woman was deported from the United Arab Emirates on Tuesday after being arrested and fined for "insulting" social media posts, according to a judicial source in Abu Dhabi.

Jodi Magi, 39, appeared in an Abu Dhabi court and was taken into custody on 12 July before being placed on a flight to Bangkok - her "destination of choice" - on Tuesday evening, the same source said.

The trouble began in February, when she posted on her Facebook page a photo of a car illegally parked between two places reserved for disabled drivers near her apartment in Abu Dhabi.

The picture was accompanied by "insulting, degrading remarks," said the source.

Following a complaint from the car's owner, a European, Magi admitted having posted the photo online but not the incriminating text, the source added.

In April, the Australian was sentenced in absentia to pay a fine of 10,000 dirhams ($2,720) and deportation.

She appeared in court with a lawyer and interpreter to appeal against the verdict the following month, but to no avail and her sentence was confirmed in June.

Magi posted on her personal website late on Tuesday that she was going to "decompress in Laos" after being in custody for 53 hours.

She said she had been "shackled at the ankles, strip-searched, blood tested, forced to sleep on a concrete floor without a mattress or pillow and having no access to toilet paper or eating utensils".

"Obviously, I think a fine and deportation with a complimentary incarceration period was an extreme reaction to a jpg (image) of a car posted to a closed Facebook page, when I did not swear or mention a single name and blocked the registration plate," Magi added in a long post on her website.

Magi said she was "pretty traumatised" by the experience, but added to being "forever heartbroken" by stories of the other women she met while in jail.

New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch

Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters

Middle East Eye delivers independent and unrivalled coverage and analysis of the Middle East, North Africa and beyond. To learn more about republishing this content and the associated fees, please fill out this form. More about MEE can be found here.