Princess Haya in divorce court - had an affair with her bodyguard

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Interesting that the daughters were captured and returned to Dubai, but the wife and her children have not been captured. Hopefully her brother is able to offer protection to her and her children.


Yes, Haya must be nervous. If she stays in London/anywhere in the UK, she'll always need to watch her back.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Interesting that the daughters were captured and returned to Dubai, but the wife and her children have not been captured. Hopefully her brother is able to offer protection to her and her children.

Yes, Haya must be nervous. If she stays in London/anywhere in the UK, she'll always need to watch her back.

I would think anywhere in the world she’d need to always be on high alert. It would seem her only safe place would be to return to Jordan, but even then, to be truly safe, she’d need to stay secluded.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Interesting that the daughters were captured and returned to Dubai, but the wife and her children have not been captured. Hopefully her brother is able to offer protection to her and her children.

Yes, Haya must be nervous. If she stays in London/anywhere in the UK, she'll always need to watch her back.

I would think anywhere in the world she’d need to always be on high alert. It would seem her only safe place would be to return to Jordan, but even then, to be truly safe, she’d need to stay secluded.


Seriously, how is this ok in 2019?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Interesting that the daughters were captured and returned to Dubai, but the wife and her children have not been captured. Hopefully her brother is able to offer protection to her and her children.

Yes, Haya must be nervous. If she stays in London/anywhere in the UK, she'll always need to watch her back.

I would think anywhere in the world she’d need to always be on high alert. It would seem her only safe place would be to return to Jordan, but even then, to be truly safe, she’d need to stay secluded.


Yeah. And even that is complicated:

Jordan and UAE are political allies. Haya's brother, the king of Jordan, COULD (would?) have offered her protection if she'd chosen to flee to him. This would have put him in an an awkward political situation: what would he have done when Haya's husband asked that his children be sent back to him in Dubai? I do think that Haya was conscious of this, and this is why she chose London. Also, she went to school in the UK, so has friends here and feels at home.

She hasn't been spotted outside her house except for the court hearings.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Interesting that the daughters were captured and returned to Dubai, but the wife and her children have not been captured. Hopefully her brother is able to offer protection to her and her children.

Yes, Haya must be nervous. If she stays in London/anywhere in the UK, she'll always need to watch her back.

I would think anywhere in the world she’d need to always be on high alert. It would seem her only safe place would be to return to Jordan, but even then, to be truly safe, she’d need to stay secluded.


Yeah. And even that is complicated:

Jordan and UAE are political allies. Haya's brother, the king of Jordan, COULD (would?) have offered her protection if she'd chosen to flee to him. This would have put him in an an awkward political situation: what would he have done when Haya's husband asked that his children be sent back to him in Dubai? I do think that Haya was conscious of this, and this is why she chose London. Also, she went to school in the UK, so has friends here and feels at home.

She hasn't been spotted outside her house except for the court hearings.


She had a picture with her brother the Prince who is the younger brother of the King of Jordan. I think her family is definitely showing what support it can - keeping in mind the UAE has a GDP that is 10X the Jordanian GDP.

The King has to think about more than just Haya and his blood niece and nephew. The Emiratis have a lot of powerful allies who will take their side if things get difficult (oil and military wise) and the Jordanians depend on a lot of foreign aid from both the U.S. and other allies to handle the humanitarian crisis dumped in their lap.

Also I nearly forgot - Haya is the King of Jordan's HALF-sister not a full sibling. His mother was the second wife. Her mother was the third wife.

Anonymous
I wonder how the British feel...being stuck in the middle.

The UK has military contracts with Jordan. But the Sheikh of Dubai basically treats Balmoral as his summer home and goes to Ascot or the Derby with the Queen every year.




https://emirateswoman.com/sheikh-mohammed-queen-elizabeth-ii/
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Interesting that the daughters were captured and returned to Dubai, but the wife and her children have not been captured. Hopefully her brother is able to offer protection to her and her children.

Yes, Haya must be nervous. If she stays in London/anywhere in the UK, she'll always need to watch her back.

I would think anywhere in the world she’d need to always be on high alert. It would seem her only safe place would be to return to Jordan, but even then, to be truly safe, she’d need to stay secluded.


Yeah. And even that is complicated:

Jordan and UAE are political allies. Haya's brother, the king of Jordan, COULD (would?) have offered her protection if she'd chosen to flee to him. This would have put him in an an awkward political situation: what would he have done when Haya's husband asked that his children be sent back to him in Dubai? I do think that Haya was conscious of this, and this is why she chose London. Also, she went to school in the UK, so has friends here and feels at home.

She hasn't been spotted outside her house except for the court hearings.


She had a picture with her brother the Prince who is the younger brother of the King of Jordan. I think her family is definitely showing what support it can - keeping in mind the UAE has a GDP that is 10X the Jordanian GDP.

The King has to think about more than just Haya and his blood niece and nephew. The Emiratis have a lot of powerful allies who will take their side if things get difficult (oil and military wise) and the Jordanians depend on a lot of foreign aid from both the U.S. and other allies to handle the humanitarian crisis dumped in their lap.

Also I nearly forgot - Haya is the King of Jordan's HALF-sister not a full sibling. His mother was the second wife. Her mother was the third wife.


The guy in the picture is her full brother. Abdullah (King of Jordan) is only her half-brother and that family has very complicated dynamics between that generation.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Interesting that the daughters were captured and returned to Dubai, but the wife and her children have not been captured. Hopefully her brother is able to offer protection to her and her children.

Yes, Haya must be nervous. If she stays in London/anywhere in the UK, she'll always need to watch her back.

I would think anywhere in the world she’d need to always be on high alert. It would seem her only safe place would be to return to Jordan, but even then, to be truly safe, she’d need to stay secluded.


Yeah. And even that is complicated:

Jordan and UAE are political allies. Haya's brother, the king of Jordan, COULD (would?) have offered her protection if she'd chosen to flee to him. This would have put him in an an awkward political situation: what would he have done when Haya's husband asked that his children be sent back to him in Dubai? I do think that Haya was conscious of this, and this is why she chose London. Also, she went to school in the UK, so has friends here and feels at home.

She hasn't been spotted outside her house except for the court hearings.


She had a picture with her brother the Prince who is the younger brother of the King of Jordan. I think her family is definitely showing what support it can - keeping in mind the UAE has a GDP that is 10X the Jordanian GDP.

The King has to think about more than just Haya and his blood niece and nephew. The Emiratis have a lot of powerful allies who will take their side if things get difficult (oil and military wise) and the Jordanians depend on a lot of foreign aid from both the U.S. and other allies to handle the humanitarian crisis dumped in their lap.

Also I nearly forgot - Haya is the King of Jordan's HALF-sister not a full sibling. His mother was the second wife. Her mother was the third wife.


The guy in the picture is her full brother. Abdullah (King of Jordan) is only her half-brother and that family has very complicated dynamics between that generation.


That is what I said.
Anonymous
Just read the VF article - how incredibly sad for Haya and for the 2 daughters who tried to also escape

https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2019/11/why-do-dubais-princesses-keep-trying-to-escape?utm_source=pocket-newtab
Anonymous
Looks like the affair rumors are true, not that I blame her.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:1. She isn't in "divorce court." The case is about protecting her child from forced marriage.

2. It is RUMORED that she may have had a relationship with the bodyguard. Not proven. And that isn't a topic either the husband or wife has commented upon, and isn't part of the proceedings.

3. If we're speculating about rumors, I think it's more likely that she did find out about Latifa's fate, or the details about Latifa's situation. That seems more likely to me.


Her daughter is 12. The eldest son of the Sheikh just got married at age 36 to an age-appropriate 28-year-old this year.

You really think Maktoum was gearing up to marry off his youngest daughter tomorrow? Latifa is 34 and yet to be married. His daughter Maryam married at 26. He has at least 7 other 20-year-old and older daughters - all unmarried.


Maktoum is a monster: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/0/inside-story-dubai-princesswhofled-billionaire-father/
Anonymous
This CNN story on the judge's ruling - wow. This is a hugely damning ruling towards Maktoum. Finds he kidnapped both of the other daughters and took them back to Dubai.

https://www.cnn.com/2020/03/05/uk/court-dubai-ruler-sheikh-mohammed-princess-haya-gbr-intl/index.html
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I wonder how the British feel...being stuck in the middle.

The UK has military contracts with Jordan. But the Sheikh of Dubai basically treats Balmoral as his summer home and goes to Ascot or the Derby with the Queen every year.




https://emirateswoman.com/sheikh-mohammed-queen-elizabeth-ii/


Look at these two trolls living the high life for no reason.

“Royalty“ needs to end pronto.
Anonymous
This CNN story on the judge's ruling - wow. This is a hugely damning ruling towards Maktoum. Finds he kidnapped both of the other daughters and took them back to Dubai.

https://www.cnn.com/2020/03/05/uk/court-dubai-ruler-sheikh-mohammed-princess-haya-gbr-intl/index.html
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