
Abu Dhabi Police arrest 237 beggars during Ramadan
Abu Dhabi Police arrested 237 beggars during the holy month of Ramadan, affirming their continued efforts to combat this phenomenon, which "tarnishes the civilised image of society" and considered a form of fraudulent schemes using "deceptive" methods.
Brigadier General Muslim Mohammed Al Ameri, Deputy Director of the Criminal Security Sector, said that beggars attempt to gain community sympathy by fabricating misleading stories to extract money.
He emphasised the police directorates' commitment to conducting ongoing campaigns to apprehend beggars, regardless of their begging methods and the ways they defraud the public.
He urged the public to cooperate and participate positively with the police in curbing begging by ensuring that alms and zakat funds are not distributed to beggars. He also urged the public to continue charitable work by donating through official channels and charitable organizations, institutions, and associations to ensure that donations reach those who deserve them.
He explained that giving money or alms to beggars is an unintended encouragement by some benefactors to the beggars to continue begging, which leads to the spread of crimes they commit under the guise of begging.

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Middle East Eye
07-05-2025
- Middle East Eye
Judge says detained Turkish national Rumeysa Ozturk must be moved to Vermont
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Middle East Eye
02-05-2025
- Middle East Eye
Lawyers lament treatment of detained Indian academic Badar Khan Suri
On 17 March, Badar Khan Suri, the Indian post-doctoral scholar at Georgetown University, was picked up by masked agents from the Department of Homeland Security outside his home in Virginia. In the days that followed, Suri was moved to five locations across three states before he arrived at a detention centre in Texas, where, for the next two weeks, agents made him wear used underwear as well as a bright red, high-risk uniform allegedly reserved for people who pose security threats, and forced him to sleep on the floor while a television set blasted at full volume for at least 21 hours of the day. Suri, who was also observing the month of Ramadan at the time, was also denied water and food to break his fast. These are some of the details of Suri's harrowing experience since he was taken more than 40 days ago by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, as described in a motion filed by his lawyers at a federal district court in Virginia on Thursday. 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Suri, who has been working as a postdoctoral fellow at the Alwaleed Bin Talal Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding at the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University, Washington, DC, was told that his student visa had been revoked and that he faced deportation. Hours after Suri's case made the news, the pro-Israel conservative outfit Middle East Forum claimed credit for his arrest. Saleh had been added to the pro-Israel blacklisting site, Canary Mission, in which her connection with Al Jazeera - as a former employee as well as the city of birth, Gaza City, were cited "as support for her alleged ties with Hamas". Saleh described claims that her husband was considered a threat to the US as "the most ridiculous thing I have ever heard". "Badar is a man of peace who studies peace. He is a scholar who loves books and teaching,' Saleh said. 'I miss Badar. Our three children are missing their father. All we want, all we are praying for, is justice and freedom.' 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Gulf News
22-04-2025
- Gulf News
Final notice: Sharjah Municipality warns vehicle owners of unclaimed impounded cars
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