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UAE princess, seven daughters face trial for slavery

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Eight members of the Abu Dhabi royal household who are accused of treating 20 domestic workers like “slaves,” are being tried in absentia in Brussels on Thursday.

Princess Hamda Alnehayan, the widow of the sheikh of Abu Dhabi, and her seven daughters are accused of treating their domestic workers in an “inhumane and degrading” way.

They are also accused of confiscating the passports of their employees, and refusing to pay their salaries.

Lawyers said that the domestic workers, who had been hired as nannies, cooks and domestic helpers, had to be at the princesses’ disposal day and night, and were never allowed to leave the property.

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The lawyers also said the princesses had insulted their workers, by calling them “cows, dogs and whores.”

The case dates back to 2008.

Following a tip-off, Belgian police had raided a luxury hotel, where the princesses occupied an entire floor for a whole year.

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The Belgian Federal Centre for Migration is a co-plaintiff in the case.

The domestic workers are reportedly from the Philippines, Morocco, India, Egypt, Turkey, Iraq and Syria, and were allegedly held captive for eight months.

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