A woman charged with criminal offences in Dubai after she was allegedly a victim of domestic violence has said she is “so relieved… thankful and grateful” to have returned to Ireland.
Tori Towey, 28, faced charges including attempted suicide and consuming alcohol and had her passport destroyed.
Her flight from Dubai landed in Dublin at 12:21 local time.
“I’m just so relieved, I just I can’t believe it,” Ms Towey told Irish broadcaster RTÉ.
Ms Towey added that the support of the Irish people and the media had been amazing.
And, now she plans to see her family and friends.
But first of all, Ms Towey said she is going to “go home and rest” after an ordeal she described as “tiring”.
Ms Towey, from County Roscommon, was working as a flight attendant with an airline based in Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), when she was charged with attempting suicide and consuming alcohol.
Her case prompted an intervention by Taoiseach (Irish prime minister) Simon Harris earlier this week after it was raised in the Dáil (Irish lower house of parliament).
Police in the UAE withdrew the charges against her on Wednesday and a travel ban was lifted.
Ms Towey said she was “so thankful and grateful to be back” and spoke of her fear of not being able to return to Ireland.
“Obviously when my mother came out to me it was a massive help, but it was just the unknown and just not knowing anything, not knowing what’s going to happen,” she said.
“It’s only kind of between yesterday and today that I kind of got clarity. I wasn’t getting any answers, but I’m just glad to be back.”
Ms Towey was speaking at the airport beside her mother, Caroline, and aunt Ann Flynn.
Caroline said it is “great to have her home” and described the ordeal as “a nightmare, a real nightmare”.
Ms Towey’s mother said the plan now is to “go home and get our heads together and move on”.
Her case drew attention in Ireland when it was raised in the Dáil by Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald on Tuesday.
“She has been the victim of the most gross domestic violence,” Ms McDonald said.
“Her passport has been destroyed. There was a travel ban imposed on her.”
The Irish government should make it “absolutely plain to the authorities of Dubai that no woman should be treated in this way”, Ms McDonald told the Dáil, and that “an Irish citizen, an Irish woman, will not be treated in this way”.
The taoiseach thanked Ms McDonald for bringing the case to his attention and said he was ready to “intervene”.
Mr Harris said her treatment had been “utterly, utterly unacceptable”.
He went on to say Ms Towey had “been the victim of male violence”.
“What Tori has been through is, I think, unimaginable for so many people here in this country, that a woman who has been the victim of a brutal attack found herself waking up not in a hospital, but in a police station,” Mr Harris added.
On Wednesday, the taoiseach told the Dáil that a travel ban preventing Ms Towey from leaving the UAE had been lifted and Irish embassy staff would be escorting Ms Towey to the airport.
After her arrival in Dublin Airport on Thursday afternoon, Ms Towey thanked the taoiseach, Ms McDonald, Tánaiste (deputy prime minister) Micheál Martin and the Irish ambassador to the UAE.
She also thanked human rights advocate and lawyer Radha Stirling from Detained in Dubai, who assisted her case.
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