• Liverpool law student Mia O’Brien has been sentenced to 25 years in a Dubai prison after a one-day trial.
  • Her mother, Danielle McKenna, says the 23-year-old was denied a fair hearing and is enduring dire prison conditions.
  • The case underscores the UAE’s zero-tolerance drug laws and raises questions about justice for foreign nationals abroad.

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (TDR) — A British university student has been sentenced to 25 years in prison in Dubai after being convicted of drug trafficking in a case her family insists was mishandled and unjust. Mia O’Brien, 23, from Liverpool, was arrested last October after police reportedly discovered 50 grams of cocaine in an apartment she shared with friends. Despite pleading not guilty, O’Brien was convicted during a one-day trial held entirely in Arabic, leaving her devastated family fighting for answers.

From Arrest to Conviction

According to reports, O’Brien was detained with a friend and the friend’s boyfriend, both of whom also faced charges of drug dealing. The arrest shocked those who knew her—she had been studying law at the University of Liverpool and had no prior record.

Her trial, conducted on July 25, lasted just a single day. O’Brien was not provided English translation during proceedings, and her mother later revealed that Mia learned of her 25-year sentence and £100,000 fine only through her lawyer after the hearing concluded.

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“She pleaded not guilty — they don’t have a just trial over there,” said her mother, Danielle McKenna, in an interview with the Daily Mail. “She was just given a life sentence and has to serve 25 years. The trial was all in Arabic, and Mia was told of the sentence later by her lawyer.”

“Living Hell” Behind Bars

McKenna described her daughter’s ordeal as “absolutely devastating,” adding that prison conditions are unbearable. After her conviction, O’Brien was transferred to a new facility she described as overcrowded and violent.

“She’s going through it at the minute. She’s just been transferred to another prison after getting a life sentence. It’s been a massive shock. Mia said she has to sleep on a mattress on the floor and shares the cell with six others. The prison conditions are horrendous,” McKenna said.

O’Brien told her mother she has witnessed fights and felt unsafe, relying on banging a heavy metal door to summon guards who are rarely present. “She is being really strong, but I know she is going through a living hell,” McKenna added.

A Family’s Fight for Help

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In the weeks following her arrest, McKenna attempted to raise funds through a GoFundMe page to cover legal fees and travel expenses. The fundraiser was later removed by the platform for violating its policies against funding criminal defenses. A GoFundMe spokesperson explained, “It was removed because it violates Term 9 of the Prohibited Conduct section in our Terms of Service.”

McKenna has since turned to social media, sharing bank details directly on Facebook to encourage donations. “I haven’t seen my daughter since last October,” she wrote. “Mia is only 23 years old and has never done a bad thing in her life.”

UAE’s Zero-Tolerance Drug Laws

The United Arab Emirates is among the world’s strictest nations when it comes to drug enforcement. Gov.uk explicitly warns British travelers that possession of even tiny amounts of narcotics—including cannabis—can result in a minimum three-month prison sentence and fines of up to 100,000 dirhams (£20,000).

Trafficking charges can carry life imprisonment or, in the most severe cases, the death penalty. Emirati law also considers the presence of drugs in the bloodstream as possession, and even CBD products or so-called “herbal highs” are illegal.

The central prison where O’Brien is being held has been compared to “Dubai’s version of Alcatraz,” notorious for its harsh conditions and overcrowding.

A Warning to Others

For McKenna, the ordeal is both personal tragedy and cautionary tale. “This is a young girl, who went to university to do law, and unfortunately got mixed up in the wrong so-called friends and made a very stupid mistake and is now paying the price,” she said.

British authorities have yet to comment publicly on the case, but legal experts note that foreign nationals accused of drug crimes in the UAE face steep hurdles, with few avenues for appeal and limited diplomatic leverage.

As O’Brien adjusts to life behind bars, her family continues to campaign for her, balancing despair with the hope that international attention may provide relief.

Will Mia O’Brien’s case spark a wider reckoning over justice for foreign nationals in Dubai, or remain a harrowing cautionary tale for travelers abroad?

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