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Sie soll eine Bedienstete festgehalten und ausgebeutet haben. Nun muss sich die saudi-arabische Prinzessin in den USA wegen Menschenhandels vor Gericht verantworten. Ihr drohen zwölf Jahre Haft.
Eine Prinzessin des saudi-arabischen Königshauses muss sich in den USA wegen Menschenhandels vor Gericht verantworten. Der 42 Jahre alten Meschael Alayban wird vorgeworfen, eine Hausbedienstete aus Kenia gegen deren Willen in ihrem Haus in Kalifornien festgehalten und ausgebeutet zu haben. Sollte sie verurteilt werden, drohen Alayban bis zu zwölf Jahren Gefängnis. Das 30 Jahre alte Opfer war den Angaben der Staatsanwaltschaft zufolge 2012 in Kenia angeworben worden. Bei ihrer Ankunft wurde ihr der Pass abgenommen, sie durfte nicht mehr gehen, musste wesentlich länger arbeiten als vereinbart und wurde dafür deutlich schlechter bezahlt. Schließlich gelang ihr die Flucht.
Die königliche Familie und das lange Strafregister
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Kaution von fünf Millionen Dollar
Das ist keine Diskussion über einen Vertragsbruch“, sagte der Bezirksstaatsanwalt von Orange County, Tony Rackaucka, bei der Kautionsverhandlung. „Hier wurde jemanden gegen seinen eigenen Willen festgehalten“. Die Prinzessin wurde vorübergehend festgenommen, befindet sich gegen eine Kaution von fünf Millionen Dollar auf freiem Fuß. Sie selbst erschien am Mittwoch nicht vor Gericht. Ihr Anwalt sieht den Fall als eine Vertragsstreitigkeit. Die hohe Kaution kritisierte er. Nur weil seine Mandantin reich sei, dürfe man ihr nicht eine Summe in der Höhe eines Lösegeldes abverlangen.
{Quelle: www.welt.de}
Powerful: Senior members of the Saudi royal family walk around Mecca – Meshael Alayban is married to a member of the ruling al-Saud family in the Middle Eastern nation
Saudi Arabian princess charged with human trafficking
after a domestic slave
at her Orange County condo managed to escape
A Saudi princess was charged on Wednesday in California with human trafficking for allegedly holding a domestic worker against her will
Meshael Alayban, 42, has been charged with one count of human trafficking. If convicted, she faces up to 12 years in prison
Her alleged victim, a 30-year-old Kenyan woman escaped and then flagged down a bus to seek help
Bail has been set at $5 million for a Saudi Arabian princess after she was charged with holding a servant hostage against her will on Wednesday. Meshael Alayban, 42, faces human trafficking charges and up to 12 years in prison after she allegedly held a 30-year-old Kenyan at her Orange County, California home after taking her passport from her. Alayban was arrested after the Kenyan woman carrying a suitcase flagged down a bus after escaping and tearfully told a passenger that she was a human trafficking victim. The passenger helped the lady contact police who traveled to Alayban’s home where they found another four servants from the Philippines allegedly in similar conditions after serving a search warrant on the condo where the princess, her husband and her family lived.
The 30-year-old woman was hired through an agency in Kenya in March 2012 and her passport was taken from her on arrival in Saudi Arabia by Alayban – who is married to a member of the ruling al-Saud family of Saudi Arabia, which has up to five thousand members. Police say Alayban’s family traveled to the United States in May with the victim and four women from the Philippines. In court details released today it is claimed that Alayban is one of the wives of Saudi Arabian Prince Abdul Rahman bin Nasser bin Abdulaziz al Saud. The Saudi Arabian consulate in Los Angeles has indicated they will pay the bail and Alayban has been ordered to wear a GPS tracking device as she is considered a flight risk. ‚This is not a contract dispute,‘ Orange County District Attorney Tony Rackauckas told the court during a bail hearing on Wednesday afternoon. ‚This is holding someone captive against their will.‘
Alayban did not appear in court. Her attorney, Paul Meyer, said the case was a contractual dispute and argued his client shouldn’t be assigned a ransom-like bail solely because she was rich. He said she had been traveling to the United States since she was a child, owned properties here and had given her word she would address the allegations. ‚This is a domestic work hours dispute,‘ he said. Rackauckas had originally asked the judge to deny bail for Alayban or set it at $20 million, saying it was unlikely any amount would guarantee a Saudi princess would show up in court. The victim was working ‚around the clock‘ for the family cooking, cleaning and caring for children, said Irvine police chief David Maggard Jr. She had been promised wages of $1,600 a month but was paid only about $200 a month, Rackauckas said. The victims alleges that instead of her contracted work eight hours a day, five days a week, she instead was putting in 16 hour shifts, seven days a week on every conceivable household chore.
The Kenyan lady also said that she was working abroad to pay for her daughter’s medical bills. Alayban allegedly only gave the passports to the five women at passport control and has had them under lock and key in a bank safe box since they arrived in the United States in May. Investigations into each of the victims‘ circumstances are ongoing. All five women are said to be in good health. No indications of physical abuse were found and were being assisted with finding housing at a shelter. The other four women left the home voluntarily with police once authorities arrived. They told police they were interested in being free, Maggard said. No charges have been filed in connection with their circumstances. Alayban is set to be arraigned in court on Thursday. ‚The laws of our nation and California do not tolerate people who deprive or violate the liberty of another and obtain forced labor or services,‘ District Attorney Tony Rackauckas said in the statement. ‚If any person is being enslaved, he or she should contact law enforcement. Any victim of human trafficking will receive the benefit and protection of the laws of the United States and California.‘ The Orange County District Attorney’s office has confirmed that she is facing up to 12 years in prison if convicted. {Source: www.dailymail.co.uk – By James Nye – 11 July 2013}