One Brit who escaped said: “We watched the rockets in the skies and then saw the official accounts from the Government. They were simply not right and did not match reality. You realised it was part of the propaganda war.”
Tens of thousands of British workers and tourists have fled the UAE since Iran retaliated following Israel and the United States launching surprise attacks last month.
But the Dubai Government has been accused of trying to “cover up” the war’s impact on the city by putting strict rules in place in a bid to “protect its image”.
Tourists, influencers and social media commentators are not allowed to show any footage of Iranian rockets as it faces losing billions of pounds in tourism revenue.
The World Travel and Tourism Council predicted visitor spending in the UAE would reach £46bn in 2025. Dubai recorded almost 19.6 million visitors in the year leading up to February 2026, a five percent increase.
A 60-year-old from London was one of 21 people of various nationalities arrested for filming missiles in the sky.
The campaign group ‘Detained in Dubai’ is helping them.
Ben Keith, an international human rights barrister who has represented many of those arrested in Dubai, said: “They want to show that the UAE is safe for foreign tourists and workers.
“They do not want to show any images of the missiles getting through. They will do anything to protect the image of Dubai.”
One Brit who escaped over the desert with his family to Oman told the Mirror: “We watched the rockets in the skies and then saw the official accounts from the Government.
“They were simply not right and did not match reality. You realised it was part of the propaganda war.”
UAE’s defence systems stopped more than 90 percent of 1,700 Iranian projectiles. But military installations and the Fairmont Hotel, located on Dubai’s famous tree-shaped island, were dramatically hit.
The airport, one of the busiest aviation hubs in the world, had to close.
Attacks on two data centres briefly left Dubai residents unable to use their phones for digital payments. British financial giant Standard Chartered evacuated its entire staff from the prestigious Dubai International Financial Centre after an Iranian threat to target economic and banking interests linked to the US and Israel.
Tehran’s Revolutionary Guard listed the tech giants Google, Microsoft, Palantir, IBM, Nvidia and Oracle among targeted US companies, warning people to stay at least a kilometre away from banks. But any foreigner, including holidaymakers, who causes “reputational harm” to Dubai can face fines of up to £200,000, as well as a decade or even life in prison. And that includes any footage of Iranian attacks.
Campaign groups report that WhatsApp video and voice calls are banned because their encryption makes them harder for the regime to ‘spy on’.
The Gulf Cooperation Council has refused US offers to enter the conflict, as one Dubai businessman stated that ‘reckless American decisions plunged the region into war.’ And the crisis has not only impacted Dubai tourism. It has hit all of the Gulf states, including 2022 World Cup host Qatar, and Saudi Arabia, which will hold the 2034 tournament.
A mum and daughter from Falmouth, Cornwall, who did not want to give their full names before they were back home, enjoyed a holiday in Oman and elected to stay on even after the missiles hit. Speaking exclusively to the Mirror, Bella, 33, said: “We feel so sorry for the locals. Our guide kept taking calls from people who were cancelling trips. It is their livelihoods, and yet it has nothing to do with them.”
Mum Virginia, a retired scuba diving instructor, added: “One holidaymaker went to the airport, but returned when her flight to Australia was cancelled. It has been terrible for so many here.”
Jamie Mallon, 54, a financial advisor from Southampton, was convinced that the World Trade Centre of Abu Dhabi was a target for Iran because of the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Centre in New York. Jamie and his daughter, Izzy, 27, were caught in the terrifying spread of the war in the Middle East within minutes of arrival. One security alert on his phone told him 1,184 drones were fired at Abu Dhabi in one day along with eight cruise missiles.
Like thousands of UK nationals, they fled across the desert to fly home from Oman. Last week, 168,000 Brits had registered their presence across Bahrain, Israel, Kuwait, Lebanon, Palestine, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.
More than 12,000 Brits were repatriated from the UAE on Government chartered aircraft and scheduled flights.
