New Delhi: Mobile phone numbers belonging to Princess Haya bint al-Hussein of Dubai, her closest aides, advisers and friends, were being entered into a computer system operated by agents of the emirate of Dubai, one of the clients of spyware manufacturer NSO Group, The Guardian reported. Closest aides and friends of emir's ex-wife also began to appear on the database as she moved to the UK. As her plane touched down in April 2019, Princess Haya, who was accompanied by her two children, might have hoped she was beyond the reach of her ex-husband, the emir of Dubai, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum.
The phone numbers of Haya, and eight of her close associates, appear in a dataset believed to indicate people of interest to a government client of NSO. That data has been obtained by Forbidden Stories and Amnesty International and analysed by media organisations around the world, including the Guardian. The numbers in the leaked records include those of Haya's personal assistant, senior staff at her private security firm, and even one of the lawyers advising her in her custody dispute with Sheikh Mohammed.
The Guardian reported her relationship with Sheikh Mohammed, which had been cordial, began to deteriorate following a highly public and unsuccessful escape attempt by another of his children, Princess Latifa. Haya, according to the judgment, began making inquiries about Latifa's welfare, but subsequently began to experience a "progressively more hostile climate" from the sheikh and his advisers.
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Trusted staff members were dismissed without her approval, and Haya and her representative were ejected from the ruler's court - "a huge public slap in the face", she said. She also discovered that Sheikh Mohammed had divorced her under sharia law on February 7, 2019, the anniversary of her father's death, without telling her first, the report said. A few weeks later, the judgment described how she claimed Sheikh Mohammed phoned her directly. "I have received bad news about you," he said, making an ambiguous reference to her relationship with one of her bodyguards, "I am starting to doubt you." Haya told the court that the call "terrified" her. The report said anonymous, threatening notes, and even firearms, were left in her bedroom, she claims.