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ABU DHABI/ISLAMABAD – The United Arab Emirates presents itself as a beacon of modernity and tolerance, a “brotherly” partner to Pakistan for decades. But in the spring of 2026, this carefully crafted facade had shattered, revealing a brutal campaign of state retribution. As geopolitical fault lines tremored following the US-Israeli aggression on Iran, Abu Dhabi did not merely disagree with Pakistan’s diplomatic choices; it declared economic and personal war on its expatriate underclass. Tens of thousands of Pakistani workers, disproportionately Shia Muslims, are being swept up, detained, stripped of their life savings, and forcibly deported. This is not routine immigration enforcement; it is a calculated, systemic purge designed to punish a nation for the sin of peacemaking. Through exclusive testimonies, financial data, and regional analysis, this investigation exposes how the UAE has transformed into an enforcer for Zionist ambitions, weaponising the lives of the vulnerable to settle geopolitical scores.
The Dragnet: “They Were Watching Us”.
It begins with a knock at the door, or a tap on the shoulder during a night shift. For Taha, a long-time employee of Dubai’s Roads and Transport Authority, the nightmare started on April 12. Police officers, visibly uncomfortable, showed him his own photo on their system. “They told him, ‘We’re really sorry, but we can’t take your phone away from you, because they’re watching us,'” his wife, Sarah Ali, recounted to New Lines Magazine. He was handcuffed, shuffled between Jebel Ali and the notorious Al-Awir detention facility, and deported to Pakistan within a week. No charges. No trial. Just a void where justice should have been.
Taha’s story is a template, carbon-copied thousands of times over. Pakistani sources confirm to Press TV that the campaign, initially reported at 15,000 individuals, has ballooned into a crisis affecting “tens of thousands”. The mechanics are chillingly systematic: sudden arrests by the Criminal Investigation Department (CID), confiscation of phones to prevent documentation, transfers in armoured cars, and a final, degrading stop in Al-Awir before being herded onto flights home.
The targeting is specific yet arbitrary. Mohammad Amin Shaheedi, chief of Ummat-e-Wahida Pakistan, describes it as “an organised campaign to deport Shia individuals”. Yet, the net is cast based on the vaguest of criteria. A 25-year-old Sunni IT professional was deported simply because he had visited an “imam bargah” (Shia congregation hall) during Muharram. Zahir Khan, a driver snatched from the Mall of the Emirates, was asked by officers if he was Shia. When he replied yes, they told him that “clarifies things” and ordered him to stop asking questions. The UAE’s surveillance state, it appears, has fused biometric data from religious sites with mass profiling, using Emirati ID scans to map spiritual affiliations.
The Heist: Seizing The Fruits Of 25 Years Of Labour.
If the deportation is a physical violation, the financial strangulation is the long-term killing blow. The UAE isn’t just expelling bodies; it is performing a heist on generational wealth. The accounts are unanimous and harrowing: deportees are forced onto planes “without being given the opportunity to withdraw their funds”. Shaheedi reports that individuals who owned “properties worth billions of rupees” and lived in the UAE for over 25 years are sent back “empty-handed,” their bank accounts frozen and assets effectively seized.
This is state-sanctioned piracy. Qamar Abbas, a driver who spent 24 years in Dubai, was paraded through detention centres, forced into blue prison overalls, and spat out in Pakistan with no explanation. “How am I at fault? What is my children’s fault?” he asked New Lines. “The household situation has collapsed. I have no other source of income”. These are not terrorist financiers; they are labourers, doctors, teachers, and small business owners. In one stroke, Abu Dhabi has stolen the life savings of the people who built its gleaming skyscrapers, an estimated remittance powerhouse that sends over $8 billion annually to Pakistani families. The message from Abu Dhabi is ruthless: you may have built our nation, but your assets are our collateral.
Financial Warfare: The $3.5 Billion Punishment.
The deportations cannot be divorced from the sweeping financial warfare unfolding simultaneously. As Pakistan stepped into the role of sole mediator between the US and Iran, successfully brokering a temporary ceasefire on April 8 and hosting peace talks in Islamabad, the UAE seethed. Abu Dhabi wanted a decisive blow against Tehran, but Pakistan refused to abandon its neutral, peace-focused foreign policy. The punishment was swift and clinical.
In a move analysts widely describe as punitive, the UAE demanded the immediate repayment of a $3.5 billion loan years before it was due. Their call wiped out roughly 1 billion tranche on April 23, and was saved from default only by a rapid bailout from Saudi Arabia.
This was not an isolated financial event. The UAE’s telecom giant, Etisalat, has been stonewalling an $800 million payment linked to its PTCL acquisition, ballooning into an $6 billion dispute. The Emirati state was tightening the economic noose, demanding obedience or bankruptcy. It was a clear signal: Pakistan’s choice to mediate for peace rather than war was unacceptable to the UAE, which has increasingly aligned itself as Israel’s enforcer-in-chief.
The Vengeful Rift: Israel’s Ally Vs. Pakistan’s Mediator
The catalyst for this human tragedy lies in the ruins of the US-Israeli war on Iran that erupted on February 28. When Iran retaliated against American bases and assets, directly striking UAE infrastructure, the Emirates found itself exposed, intercepting a staggering 537 ballistic missiles and over 2,200 drones. Yet, when the dust settled, the Emirates was furious not just at Tehran, but at Islamabad.
Pakistan’s “sin” was non-alignment. With deep historical ties to Iran, a volatile 900km border, and a domestic Shia minority, Pakistan could not afford to become a frontline state against Tehran. Instead, it leveraged its iron-clad ties with Saudi Arabia, its nuclear weapons shield, and its diplomatic channels to become the pivotal mediator. For Abu Dhabi, which normalised ties with Israel via the Abraham Accords and has deepened security and tech pacts with it, this neutrality felt like betrayal. “Pakistan had chosen one,” noted one report of the Gulf rift, referring to the Iran-Saudi axis over the UAE-Israeli line.
This geopolitics translates into brutality on the ground. The Emirati security apparatus is currently flooded with anti-Iran hysteria. Officials have arrested 27 alleged members of “Iran-linked cells” and released propaganda videos urging residents to report “suspicious” activity. In this climate, any name associated with Shia Islam, Ali, Hassan, Hussain, Naqvi, or any visit to a Shia mosque becomes a threat marker. The UAE is not just deporting people for what they have done; it is deporting them for who they are, transforming the kafala sponsorship system into a mechanism for sectarian cleansing in the service of Israel’s anti-Iran obsessions.
The Disconnect: Denials And Horrific Conditions.
While the UAE stays silent, Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry has vacillated, offering denial and disinterest. Ministry spokesperson Tahir Andrabi flatly denied the deportations and abruptly hung up when contacted by New Lines Magazine. This official blindness stands in stark contrast to the blood and tears on the ground.
Inside Al-Awir, conditions are described as “horrendous.” Detainees allege being woken every four hours, forced to kneel, and beaten if they cannot comply due to medical conditions. A man in his 80s with a recent leg surgery was reportedly struck on his wound. Others describe strip searches, the humiliation of being filmed naked, and threats that the footage would be leaked if they spoke out upon return. One man’s arm was allegedly broken for refusing to strip. Such torture is not an aberration; it is the tool of a crackdown that relies on terrorising a community into silence.
Human Fallout And The Isolation Of Abu Dhabi:
Back in Pakistan, the impact is catastrophic. Families who depended on UAE remittances, a vital artery for the Pakistani economy, are destitute. Shaheedi warns of a “growing sense of fear, anxiety and insecurity” spreading among Pakistani Shia communities across the wider Gulf. The deportees, branded with re-entry bans, have lost not just their past savings but their future livelihoods.
Ultimately, the UAE’s campaign reveals a regime hollowed out by opportunism. It acts as a “Zionist Trojan horse”, willing to bleed its “brotherly” Pakistani ally dry to prove its fealty to harder-line Israeli and anti-Iran policies. Saudi Arabia, despite its own rivalries, stepped in with $3 billion to save Pakistan, while the UAE fractured its own OPEC membership to sever subservience to Riyadh’s energy policies.
Pakistan’s Field Marshal Asim Munir has declared UAE security integral to Pakistan’s security, and the military continues to serve as a bridge. But this purge burns the foundations of that bridge. As one report lamented, the UAE is actively “sabotaging Muslim-majority states that refuse to toe the Zionist line”. In the shuttered homes of deported drivers and professionals across Pakistan, the cost of that international power play is counted not in billions of dollars, but in empty stomachs, lost dreams, and a lifetime of savings stolen under the Gulf sun. The ummah is watching, and Abu Dhabi’s betrayal is not forgotten.
Source: Multiple News Agencies
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