UAE Pardons 57 Bangladeshis Imprisoned for Staging Protests

Above: UAE Pres. Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan. Image copyright: Tingshu Wang/Pool/Getty Images News via Getty Images

The Facts

  • Pres. Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan has pardoned 57 Bangladeshi citizens who were convicted in July for staging unauthorized protests in the United Arab Emirates against then-Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.

  • While the Abu Dhabi Federal Court of Appeal sentenced 53 people to 10 years in prison and 11 years to another, three received life sentences.


The Spin

Narrative A

Bangladeshis are the third largest expatriate group in the UAE and are expected to show utmost restraint on its soil. It's a given that they know that the oil-rich Gulf country bans unauthorized protests, prohibits speech that can encourage social unrest, and criminalizes defamation. This act of clemency — releasing Bangladeshi nationals who violated the country's laws — exemplifies Al Nahyan's compassionate leadership.

Narrative B

While this decision is welcomed, the Bangladeshi expatriates shouldn't have been detained, convicted, and sentenced for peacefully protesting against their erstwhile government in the first place. The UAE's reaction to a demonstration that had no criminal intent was extreme. The UAE must apologize for arbitrarily detaining the marchers, who neither engaged in violent acts nor used inflammatory language during their protests.