what’s behind the extradition request for 15 French drug traffickers »

By Sébastien Boussois, doctor of political science

For many years, we have wanted to repeat that the United Arab Emirates will be the laboratory of the new world, an exemplary country where modernity, success and stability blend seamlessly, where tolerance and openness will become unique characteristics in the Arab world. Dubai has become the giant screen of this collective fantasy: influencers with filtered lives, stars seeking tax exile, entrepreneurs bankrupt or on the run, fallen leaders seeking to be forgotten. The Confederation had become a smokescreen and capital catcher. Money doesn’t smell, especially in the Emirates. Although we praise its safety, cleanliness, luxury, excess and enviable political model, the reality remains stubbornly: the United Arab Emirates (UAE) has never stopped being an authoritarian power hidden behind a permanent show of modernist overtones. The country remains a haven for obscure wealth, offshore accounts, failed oligarchs, misbegotten capital and troubled businesses. This varnish is perfect, but includes mechanisms so flexible that it has long attracted another profile: that of European criminals, especially among human traffickers of French, Belgian or Dutch origin, who feel there is a paradise of almost perfect impunity.