Brit granddad faces jail for asking neighbours to show down noise at celebration

A British granddad may very well be dealing with jail in Dubai after being accused of trespassing by offended neigbours.

The unusual state of affairs occurred when he requested his daughter’s noisy neighbours to maintain the music down whereas he was babysitting.

Ian MacKeller, 75, from Aberdeenshire, Scotland, had travelled to the UAE to go to his daughter and take care of her younger little one. The neighbours had been having a New Year’s Eve celebration and Ian’s daughter needed to work early the following day, in order that they requested the host to maintain the noise down.

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Dubai has very stringent legal guidelines on, effectively, all the things (inventory)
(Image: Getty Images)

At 1am on New Year’s Day, they messaged the neighbour asking them to show the music down, but it surely solely acquired louder, they declare. Ian determined to go over and ask them to quieten down, taking his toddler granddaughter with him so his daughter might get some sleep.

When nobody answered the door, Ian observed an open path resulting in the backyard the place the celebration was taking place. He requested if they might transfer the celebration indoors, however claims the company began pushing him and shouting at him, even knocking his granddaughter’s bottle out of his palms.

Some company tried to assist Ian go away, however the host got here as much as him, shouting and even “throwing her drink over him and the baby”.



Efforts are being made to have him launched
(Image: Detained In Dubai / SWNS)

Ian labelled her actions as “unacceptable,” and needed to get the police concerned, however his daughter was in opposition to it, fearing neighbourly stress. In an surprising flip of occasions, the host of the celebration reported Ian for trespassing, stopping him from leaving the nation and probably touchdown him in jail for a number of years.

Radha Stirling, a lawyer and CEO of Detained in Dubai, is now preventing for Ian’s launch, and defined, “It is standard practice in Dubai to preemptively file a police report when at risk of being reported. The prosecution tends to side with whomever makes the first police report, so if someone is at risk of being reported themselves, they will quickly file against the actual victim.”

“This is how people familiar with Dubai justice manipulate the system to their advantage. It is commonplace for foreigners in this situation to offer financial compensation to their accuser in order to drop the case.”

“The authorities in Dubai need to crack down on this blatant abuse of the criminal justice system. The practice is systemic and will require significant legislative change to stamp it out completely.”

Andrew Bowie, MP for West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine, has additionally been contacted by Ian for help.

A spokesman for Mr Bowie’s workplace mentioned: “Andrew has engaged with the Foreign Office after being contacted by Mr McKellar, and has given details of his case to the relevant minister.

“Andrew’s workplace are giving Mr McKellar’s household recommendation and help, and are working to assist get him the medical assist he wants.”

* This article was crafted with the help of an AI tool, which speeds up Daily Star’s editorial research. An editor reviewed this content before it was published. You can report any errors to starletters@dailystar.co.uk

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