UAE | Government
Accusations levelled against UAE human rights board
Members of the UAE Human Rights Association accused its board of directors of abusing their mandate, violating the group's charter, and sexism against women.
Dubai: Members of the UAE Human Rights Association accused its board of directors of abusing their mandate, violating the group's charter, and sexism against women.
According to a letter, board members allegedly used "abusive and obscene language towards people, a behaviour that included defamation of honour, of especially women, who did not agree with their views, and threatened a member with imprisonment."
The letter went on to say that the director closed the headquarters for more than one month for no reason. It also cited "negligence of human rights complaints submitted by the public."
The letter was distributed by some of the association's members during the fourth annual general meeting held on Wednesday at the association's head quarter in Dubai. The meeting was held to endorse the financial and administrative report of the group for 2008. Those who wrote the protest letter included three members of the Board of Directors.
The association was established on March 2006 and was the first non-government human rights association in the UAE.
The three board members, Mohammad Musharbak, Al Anoud Bu Seem and Khowla Bel Houl, submitted a joint resignation from the board seven months ago to protest what they claim as "violations committed by the board". The status of their resignation is not known.
"We did not want to create chaos at the association and tried to solve the problem quietly but this didn't work. Therefore we wanted to bring the issue to the members' attention," the three board members said in the letter.
Mohammad Gobash, one of the members who submitted the allegations to the board, claimed that "one of the board members threatened to put a member in prison as he was in disagreement, citing his close connection with the Public Prosecution".
"We demand a transparent reply from the board. The board needs to either give us an evidence that these violations did not happen or you address the violations by holding those responsible accountable," Gobash added. However, the board of Directors called the allegations baseless.
Share this article
More from UAE Government
More from UAE
Popular in UAE

-
Your pictures
Readers' pictures
The best reader pictures from around the UAE this week
Latest news
- Dubai Airshow: Change in Emirates check-in time
- Dance group brings taste of Korean culture to Abu Dhabi
- EAD studies focus on water security
- Dubai Press Club marks 10th anniversary
- Visitors flock to see latest offerings at Sharjah book fair
- UAE combats human trafficking
- Ministry denies hijacking of UAE-flagged ship
- Saif meets special needs centre users
- Man says he repaid 95% of amount he embezzled
- Dubai saleswoman claims she was duped, raped
- Female clerk, waiter deny drug trafficking charges
- Live hoardings: Ad a glance
- Gem of a woman
- Riveting Bird Bath
- 13-year-old graduates in share trading course
Community Reports
-
Help me find my precious cat
Raif, my cute eight-month-old ‘fur ball', went missing in Abu Dhabi's Al Bateen area last month
-
Pavement parking irks pedestrians
Gulf News reader calls on authorities to step in and stop car owners from invading pathways meant for safe walking
-
Faded parking lines pose a problem
Motorists could be fined for parking incorrectly even though they can hardly see the boundaries in the designated areas
-
School buses block residential parking
Commercial vehicles taking up free parking facilities in Al Wuheida, inconveniencing residents in surrounding villas


