Dubai might be “the planet’s influencer capital”, but the people bankrolling the city aren’t TikTokers arriving with suitcases of bikinis. The Emirati city also attracts the kind of people who jet in on helicopters stuffed with cash, positioning itself as the global centre of crooks, conmen and kleptocrats fleeing their homelands.
Former Afghan President Ashraf Ghani reportedly fled to Dubai after the Taliban takeover of his country in a chopper loaded with hard currency. He joined former Pakistani military ruler Pervez Musharraf, who moved there to avoid charges following the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, and Thailand’s Thaksin Shinawatra, who went into self-imposed exile after he was overthrown in a military coup in 2006.
Yet these men are small fry compared to the global criminal elite who have also moved to the air-conditioned oasis. Irish mobsters the Kinahans left their Spanish hideout for Dubai in 2016, the same year as powerful South African kleptocrats the Gupta brothers. They join Somali pirates and Al Qaeda members in enjoying the Emirate’s bespoke money laundering services. Most recently, the city has been flooded with the villains of the hour: wealthy Russians caught up in sanctions and a tanking economy in need of a safe haven following the invasion of Ukraine.
Dubai, no stranger to patronage networks and opaque systems of governance, is deliberately attracting this money. The state is strongly pushing crypto, and crypto kings have descended on the city — which is beginning to be known as “The Wall Street of crypto”. Today, the Russian elite who have flooded Dubai are largely bringing their money in digital form, rather than in the bank notes of bygone eras.
But there’s no greater appeal for money launderers than bricks and mortar. Dubai offers investor visas for those willing to spend upwards of £1 million on property. With the recent influx of Russian money, property sales increased 45% in April (compared to 2021) and 51% in May. While the sanctions against Russia’s elite have been so biting that Roman Abramovich and his stolen billions are no longer even welcome in London, the original home of blood-soaked wealth, he has been spotted strolling Dubai’s marinas, even docking his superyacht in its harbour. He is not the only Russian kleptocrat said to be shopping for a luxury apartment there.
For a city that touts its very low crime rate — abuse of blue-collar migrant workers doesn’t count, of course — Dubai now has a dance card that would make Interpol blush. That is, if the agency hadn’t elected Emirati Major General Ahmed Nasser al-Raisi as its president last year. But the city gets away with it, by operating a very simple code for its “colourful” expat community: do your dirty work elsewhere. So long as your enemies aren’t murked on Dubai’s streets, and yachts loaded with cocaine aren’t arriving in the city’s ports, mobsters and tyrants are welcomed with open arms.
The Kinahans, for instance, run a transnational cocaine business and are suspected to be behind some 20 murders in Ireland and Europe. But in Dubai, they have enjoyed the best of what the city has to offer, laundering dirty money into hard assets. Having been deemed “low-risk” by UAE authorities, the Kinahans built a luxury property portfolio and a business front to maintain the ruse that they’re not cons. Ireland and the European Union were frustrated by attempts to catch their man because the UAE does not have an extradition treaty with either.
And yet, the welcome extended to them in Dubai may be cooling. In April, the Emirate agreed to give up the Kinahans and their vast business empire, with extradition to the West appearing likely. Recently, Dubai’s police actually arrested South Africa’s Gupta brothers after Interpol issued a red notice against them.
Join the discussion
Join like minded readers that support our journalism by becoming a paid subscriber
To join the discussion in the comments, become a paid subscriber.
Join like minded readers that support our journalism, read unlimited articles and enjoy other subscriber-only benefits.
SubscribeOne visit to the ghastly fake place was enough for me: just look at how horse racing and breeding panders to the odious demi sane Mohammed and his treatment of his wife and family: the craven selective blind eye turned to Arab countries that have gas and oil is shameful, but Israel has actually outflanked them all with its recent agreements… and of course brains!!
One day it’ll thankfully return to the sands and the locals will go back to pearl diving and raiding each other.
I hope that there will be generous redundancy benefits for the ladies of the night and purveyors of narcotic stimulant, when this happens?….. as it will..
Dubai is not ” a major hydrocarbon producer “; it’s oil reserves are insignificant. It is Abu Dhabi that, as this somewhat confused article also points out, has the oil reserves and therefore calls the shots. So actually Dubai does have “zero leverage” other than its goodwill from Abu Dhabi, which is something of a veneer.
Illuminating article. They always say ‘Follow The Money’
One USN Ohio class submarine could vaporise the entire Middle East at the touch of a button.
Perhaps that day approaches?
amen to that.. and them!
It is these sort of thoughtful and well argued comments that continue to make Britain and Brits so despised in the rest of the world
And Gulf Arabs so respected?
evidence please?
What did Kipling call them? Wasn’t it ‘lesser breeds’?
It looks like he may have been correct.
I remember the gulf arabs at Sandhurst, not least one particular Quatari… unbelieveablely idle and thoroughly devious and unpleasant… He even had the temerity to give a certain Grenadier Colour S’arnt a fake Rolex in exchange for a favour, that said Colour S’arnt discovered when he tried to pawn the watch!! Next mornings Breakfast Roll call was not fun for said Arab!!!
The “White Man’s Burden” as we used to say in those halcyon days of Enid Blyton!
Surely one needs a jet to jet in. Helicopters, even those stuffed with cash, hover and slowly set down.
Utter nonsense backed by no source other than this said and that said…no data…no facts.