Facebook post lands Australian woman in UAE prison

14 Jul, 2015 06:06 / Updated 9 years ago

A female Australian artist was arrested and jailed in Abu Dhabi for “writing bad words on social media,” after reportedly posting a picture of a car parked across two disabled parking spots on Facebook.

READ MORE: MoJ profiting from ‘notorious’ Saudi prison contracts challenged in High Court

Jodi Magi, 39, was arrested by United Arab Emirates police and put into prison, after being found guilty of “writing bad words on social media about a person,” ABC reported.

“No one is talking to me, no one is telling me what’s going on,” Magi said. “And they were about to put me in male lock-up and then they turned me away – no one knows what to do with me. I’m pretty scared.”

Magi reportedly took a picture of a car parked across two parking spots for the disabled, but with no permit stickers visible. When posting the image to Facebook, she blackened out the license plate number and did not mention any names.

Australian woman Jodi Magi jailed in Abu Dhadi over a Facebook photo http://t.co/T7tVmCcEkipic.twitter.com/f89Z6hoADa

— Sky News Australia (@SkyNewsAust) July 13, 2015

After being detained, Magi said she was driven around in a car for around four hours. She was also forced to sign several documents in Arabic without any translation. It is not yet known how for long she will be imprisoned.

READ MORE: BBC journalists jailed in Qatar while on official pre-World Cup visit

Magi has been living in Abu Dhabi since 2012, teaching design and working on her art projects, which include political satire.

The joy of Gina: let them eat coal http://t.co/mbmQlyeiYYpic.twitter.com/Zj2gkSBlFK

— Jodi Magi (@Jodi_Magi) June 20, 2015

She said that the Australian embassy has failed to provide any real help, aside from advising her to get a lawyer.

“I’m not sure if it was me being naive. I was under the impression that embassies were in countries to help their citizens in times of difficulty,” she said. “But from my experience it seems that their job here seems to be to generate business and they have no interest in anything other than that.”

In a statement to ABC, the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) said that it “continues to provide consular assistance to an Australian woman detained in Abu Dhabi and that for privacy reasons they cannot provide any more information.”