'It's been a complete shambles': Brit Jamie Harron held in Dubai for touching a man's hip finally lands safely in UK after being freed

Tom Powell25 October 2017

The Briton who faced three months in a Dubai jail for touching a man’s hip in a bar has landed back in the UK after being freed.

Jamie Harron, 27, was given an emotional welcome by family and friends after touching down at Glasgow Airport late on Tuesday evening.

He was sentenced to three months in prison after he was arrested in July and accused of putting his hand on a man's hip to avoid spilling a drink in a crowded bar.

Mr Harron said he was relieved to be back on home soil after facing the prospect of three years in a UAE jail.

He said: "It feels very good, I'm very happy to be home.”

Despite branding his ordeal a "complete shambles", Mr Harron told reporters he would not rule out returning to Dubai.

Jamie Harron is reunited with his dad Graham at Glasgow Airport
PA

He said: "I would go back through work once everything has been cleared for me.

"I'm not going back in a hurry, but I would go back later on.

Mr Harron was freed after Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum made a special intervention
PA

"I think I've been caught up in a bad situation.

"I didn't see light at the end of the tunnel to be honest."

Asked what the first thing he would do when he got home was, the electrician added: "Get in a good bed, it's been a total shambles.

Jamie Harron hugs his mother Patricia as he arrives at Glasgow Airport after being freed
PA

"It's just total shock I feel. I get to sleep in my own bed because I've been sleeping on my mate's couch for three and half months.

"I can't believe it's been four months in total."

Mr Harron speaks to the press after touching down on Tuesday evening
PA

Campaign group Detained in Dubai (DiD), which has been representing Mr Harron, said he was sentenced to three months imprisonment at court on Sunday, but had his passport returned on Monday after authorities dropped the charges.

Radha Stirling, chief executive of DiD, then thanked Sheikh Mohammed, the Prime Minister of the UAE, for his personal intervention in the case.

She said: "This was a courageous and honourable decision on the part of Sheikh Mohammed, and while it highlights the urgent need for judicial reform in the country, it is also a hopeful sign that the United Arab Emirates' leadership possesses the will and vision to pursue such reforms in the future."

Mr Harron, from Stirling, had been working in Afghanistan and was on a two-day stopover in the United Arab Emirates in the summer.

But after his arrest for "public indecency", he lost his job and was told he faced up to three years in jail.

He was sentenced "in absentia" to 30 days in prison for failing to appear at a court hearing for making a rude gesture and drinking alcohol in the incident.

This resulted in him being locked up for five days at Al Barsha prison, before he was bailed and his passport confiscated.

After authorities intervened, Dubai police contacted Mr Harron on Monday morning, telling him the case against him had been dismissed and he could collect his passport.

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