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THE models who are facing jail after posing naked on a Dubai balcony are mainly from Ukraine, it is claimed.
Footage taken from a next door building shows over a dozen women pose for the shoot at an apartment in the city's upscale Marina neighbourhood.
Do you know those involved? Call The Sun Online news desk on +44 (0) 207 782 4368 or email tariq.tahir@thesun.co.uk
Dubai police said they arrested a “group of people who appeared in an indecent video” on charges of public debauchery.
Videos and photographs showing the naked women, lined up on a balcony while being filmed, emerged on social media on Saturday evening.
Those detained face up to six months in prison and a fine of around £1,000 for violating public decency laws in the United Arab Emirates, which includes nudity and other lewd behaviour.
The sharing of pornographic material is also punishable with prison time and hefty fines under the country’s laws, which are based on Islamic law, or Shariah.
All of the models are understood to be from the ex-Soviet Union including Ukraine, Belarus and Moldova. 
A Russian man has also been detained and named as the organiser of the “lewd” shoot.
He is understood to claimed he was in a nearby apartment and had filmed the spectacle showing the naked women.
TASS news agency later cited the Russian consul in Dubai as saying that a Russian man was being held in connection with the incident.
But a consulate source told Russian media outlet LIFE that no Russian women had been detained.
It cited a consulate source as saying: ”According to the latest data received from the police of the Emirates, there are no Russian women among the detained.
“A Russian man was detained. According to the police, they suspect him of being one of those who sponsored the entire event."
State-linked newspaper The National reported it appeared to be a publicity stunt, without elaborating.
It came as a shock in the UAE where tamer behaviour, like kissing in public or drinking alcohol without a license, has landed people in jail.
Dubai police said those arrested over the indecent video have been referred to public prosecutors.
“Such unacceptable behaviours do not reflect the values and ethics of Emirati society,” said police in a statement.
The UAE, while liberal in many regards compared to its Middle Eastern neighbours, has strict laws governing expression and social media.
People have been jailed for their comments and videos online.
The country's majority state-owned telecom companies block access to major pornographic websites.
Dubai also has strict social media laws that make it an offence to insult others or even use language where people feel insulted.
The laws also forbid anything “defamatory” against the UAE and this can even include the reporting of a news article.
A woman from Surrey, Laleh Shahravesh, 55, is facing jail for calling her Dubai-based ex-husband an “idiot” and his new wife “a horse” under the Gulf state’s draconian social media laws.
Those who’ve fallen foul of the laws in the past include a Brit Yaseen Killick, jailed after venting anger on WhatsApp after being sold a car that broke down.
US fitness professional Jordan Branford was slapped with a nearly £60,000 fine after using the word “bitch” on Instagram, which his ex-wife believed was referring to her.
Glitzy Dubai has been in the headlines after reality TV stars and social media influencers flouted ­lockdown rules to sun themselves on its beaches.
Earlier this year they were still promoting parties there even after a coronavirus spike forced all pubs and bars to shut.
But critics have slammed so-called influencers for not doing proper work – insisting they should not be travelling abroad while the majority of Brits are locked down at home.
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7:37AM Thursday, August 25th, 2022
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More stories to check out before you go
Horrifying videos show Ukrainian civilians – including women and children – being tied up, stripped and beaten in apparent vigilante attacks.
A series of horrifying videos published on social media show Ukrainian civilians – including women and children – being tied up, stripped and beaten in apparent vigilante attacks.
Since Russia’s invasion last month, reports have emerged of humiliating public punishments dished out by Ukrainians to alleged looters and saboteurs, with several photos showing people tied to poles with their pants pulled down going viral online.
Reporting on one such image , the Daily Mail said it showed “how proud Ukrainians are fighting back against lawless criminals wanting to take advantage of the ongoing chaos”.
But a series of video clips, which depict savage beatings being doled out to the immobilised victims by alleged paramilitary groups and members of the public, paint the practice in a grim new light.
The highly distressing videos, most of which were originally published to Telegram, have racked up millions of views on Twitter after being shared in a lengthy thread by user “Juan Sinmiedo” on Sunday.
“Hundreds of civilians have been punished for diverse reasons in Ukraine by paramilitary groups and national guard. Strong footage. Tortures, abuses, humiliation, even of kids and girls,” he wrote.
“There is no a clear motive for (these) illegal abuses. They are labelled as marauders. That can include men who don’t want to fight, who are suspected of Russian sympathy, looters or people searching for food.”
He added, “We don’t know the actual reasons or for how long they are punished. It is clearly against any human rights conventions. There is no excuse for this.”
In one video, a man and a young boy are seen taped together to a light pole, their pants around their ankles and their faces painted green.
Another shows a couple, also stripped from the waist down, tied to a tree outside a house as an older woman beats the tied-up woman with a stick.
A similar video shows a man and a woman tied to a pole, the woman with her mouth taped over, being brutally beaten by a man with a large stick as the man cries in pain.
In yet another, a woman with a ponytail is taped to a pole with her hands tied behind her back – still holding her handbag – as a large man whips her with what appears to be a belt.
Marko Pavlyshyn, Emeritus Professor in Ukrainian Studies at Melbourne’s Monash University, said the videos were “confronting” and described the practice as “deplorable”.
He said the word “maroder” (мародер), which means “looter” in both Ukrainian and Russian – the language spoken in most of the videos – occurs frequently.
A number of the victims have signs with “мародер” stuck to them.
But Prof Pavlyshyn said “nothing that I can see or hear in these videos supports the tweeter’s conjectures that the victims are being punished for Russian sympathies or for not wanting to fight or for speaking Russian”.
“In one of the videos, the person being beaten is accused of trying to set on fire some object that I can’t phonetically identify,” he said.
“Ukrainian news sites have picked up similar videos – without the worst violence – where the longer context suggests that it’s looting that people are being shamed and beaten for. Whether the clips are staged or not, the phenomenon exists, and is deplorable.”
Writing for The Spectator earlier this month, freelance journalist Alex Glover described locals’ ongoing battle against “saboteurs and looters” in the capital Kyiv.
“Photos shoot across messaging groups,” he wrote.
“One shows a huddle of supposedly Russian agents caught in a metro station, along with an eviscerated teddy bear in which they were hiding rifle cartridges.
“The Ukrainians believe that saboteurs have been in most cities since January, marking out key infrastructure and military targets. Another photo shows an agent bound and gagged with masking tape. Blood streams from his head.”
Glover said the alleged looters “don’t fare much better”.
“A paunchy man has his wrists cable-tied around a utility pole, his belt used to strap his knees against it,” he wrote. “His underpants are round his ankles, his expression suggests that he has seen better days. Other looters are beaten and forced to strip naked in the snow.”
Prof Pavlyshyn noted that the videos highlighted in the viral Twitter thread were what the user “chooses exclusively to focus on, rather than civilians dead or injured as a result of bombing, shelling or rocket attacks”.
Russia has been accused of war crimes for deliberately targeting civilians during its invasion of Ukraine, which is nearing the end of its first month.
On Sunday, the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said at least 902 civilians had been killed and 1459 wounded so far, but that the actual number was likely “considerably higher”.
Most of the injuries and deaths were caused by “explosive weapons with a wide impact area, including shelling from heavy artillery and multiple-launch rocket systems, and missile and air strikes”, the OHCHR said.
The 902 deaths were detailed as “179 men, 134 women, 11 girls, and 25 boys, as well as 39 children and 514 adults whose sex is yet unknown”.
Moscow has denied targeting civilians.
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The New Zealand Army has vowed to support the family of a soldier, described as “strong, hardcore and handsome”, who was killed in Ukraine.
Finland’s Prime Minister Sanna Marin has given a tearful speech defending her private life after controversial partying pictures were leaked.
Two Australians have been chased out of town and blasted as ‘arrogant idiots’ for surfing the iconic canals of Venice.

7:37AM Thursday, August 25th, 2022
A NOTE ABOUT RELEVANT ADVERTISING: We collect information about the content (including ads) you use across this site and use it to make both advertising and content more relevant to you on our network and other sites. Find out more about our policy and your choices, including how to opt-out. Sometimes our articles will try to help you find the right product at the right price. We may receive revenue from affiliate and advertising partnerships for publishing this content or when you make a purchase.
Nationwide News Pty Ltd © 2022. All times AEST (GMT +10). Powered by WordPress.com VIP
More stories to check out before you go
Horrifying videos show Ukrainian civilians – including women and children – being tied up, stripped and beaten in apparent vigilante attacks.
A series of horrifying videos published on social media show Ukrainian civilians – including women and children – being tied up, stripped and beaten in apparent vigilante attacks.
Since Russia’s invasion last month, reports have emerged of humiliating public punishments dished out by Ukrainians to alleged looters and saboteurs, with several photos showing people tied to poles with their pants pulled down going viral online.
Reporting on one such image , the Daily Mail said it showed “how proud Ukrainians are fighting back against lawless criminals wanting to take advantage of the ongoing chaos”.
But a series of video clips, which depict savage beatings being doled out to the immobilised victims by alleged paramilitary groups and members of the public, paint the practice in a grim new light.
The highly distressing videos, most of which were originally published to Telegram, have racked up millions of views on Twitter after being shared in a lengthy thread by user “Juan Sinmiedo” on Sunday.
“Hundreds of civilians have been punished for diverse reasons in Ukraine by paramilitary groups and national guard. Strong footage. Tortures, abuses, humiliation, even of kids and girls,” he wrote.
“There is no a clear motive for (these) illegal abuses. They are labelled as marauders. That can include men who don’t want to fight, who are suspected of Russian sympathy, looters or people searching for food.”
He added, “We don’t know the actual reasons or for how long they are punished. It is clearly against any human rights conventions. There is no excuse for this.”
In one video, a man and a young boy are seen taped together to a light pole, their pants around their ankles and their faces painted green.
Another shows a couple, also stripped from the waist down, tied to a tree outside a house as an older woman beats the tied-up woman with a stick.
A similar video shows a man and a woman tied to a pole, the woman with her mouth taped over, being brutally beaten by a man with a large stick as the man cries in pain.
In yet another, a woman with a ponytail is taped to a pole with her hands tied behind her back – still holding her handbag – as a large man whips her with what appears to be a belt.
Marko Pavlyshyn, Emeritus Professor in Ukrainian Studies at Melbourne’s Monash University, said the videos were “confronting” and described the practice as “deplorable”.
He said the word “maroder” (мародер), which means “looter” in both Ukrainian and Russian – the language spoken in most of the videos – occurs frequently.
A number of the victims have signs with “мародер” stuck to them.
But Prof Pavlyshyn said “nothing that I can see or hear in these videos supports the tweeter’s conjectures that the victims are being punished for Russian sympathies or for not wanting to fight or for speaking Russian”.
“In one of the videos, the person being beaten is accused of trying to set on fire some object that I can’t phonetically identify,” he said.
“Ukrainian news sites have picked up similar videos – without the worst violence – where the longer context suggests that it’s looting that people are being shamed and beaten for. Whether the clips are staged or not, the phenomenon exists, and is deplorable.”
Writing for The Spectator earlier this month, freelance journalist Alex Glover described locals’ ongoing battle against “saboteurs and looters” in the capital Kyiv.
“Photos shoot across messaging groups,” he wrote.
“One shows a huddle of supposedly Russian agents caught in a metro station, along with an eviscerated teddy bear in which they were hiding rifle cartridges.
“The Ukrainians believe that saboteurs have been in most cities since January, marking out key infrastructure and military targets. Another photo shows an agent bound and gagged with masking tape. Blood streams from his head.”
Glover said the alleged looters “don’t fare much better”.
“A paunchy man has his wrists cable-tied around a utility pole, his belt used to strap his knees against it,” he wrote. “His underpants are round his ankles, his expression suggests that he has seen better days. Other looters are beaten and forced to strip naked in the snow.”
Prof Pavlyshyn noted that the videos highlighted in the viral Twitter thread were what the user “chooses exclusively to focus on, rather than civilians dead or injured as a result of bombing, shelling or rocket attacks”.
Russia has been accused of war crimes for deliberately targeting civilians during its invasion of Ukraine, which is nearing the end of its first month.
On Sunday, the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said at least 902 civilians had been killed and 1459 wounded so far, but that the actual number was likely “considerably higher”.
Most of the injuries and deaths were caused by “explosive weapons with a wide impact area, including shelling from heavy artillery and multiple-launch rocket systems, and missile and air strikes”, the OHCHR said.
The 902 deaths were detailed as “179 men, 134 women, 11 girls, and 25 boys, as well as 39 children and 514 adults whose sex is yet unknown”.
Moscow has denied targeting civilians.
To join the conversation, please
log in. Don't have an account?
Register
Join the conversation, you are commenting as Logout
The New Zealand Army has vowed to support the family of a soldier, described as “strong, hardcore and handsome”, who was killed in Ukraine.
Finland’s Prime Minister Sanna Marin has given a tearful speech defending her private life after controversial partying pictures were leaked.
Two Australians have been chased out of town and blasted as ‘arrogant idiots’ for surfing the iconic canals of Venice.






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Published: 10:08 BST, 27 September 2018 | Updated: 14:03 BST, 27 September 2018
Police in Ukraine have vowed to charge the parents of six young girls who took part in a 'lingerie for children' fashion shoot. 
The girls, aged eight to 14, were photographed wearing lacy underwear and shawls as part of a promotional campaign for fashion label Alla Frenkel's new line.
Frenkel's, which is based
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