The United Arab Emirates has urged men to avoid wearing the white robes,
headscarf and headband of the national dress when traveling abroad,
after a businessman visiting the United States was wrestled to the
ground and held as an Islamic State suspect.
UAE
media reported that the Emirati man was detained in Avon,
Ohio, last
week after a female clerk at a local hotel called 911 to report what she
had described as a man affiliated to Islamic State, according to the
Arabic-language al-Bayan newspaper. It only identified him by his
initials.
The
English language The National said the receptionist at the Fairfield
Inn hotel called the police after she heard the man talking on his phone
in the hotel lobby.
Gulf
News, another UAE newspaper, published photos of the Emirati man in
white robes being wrestled to the ground and handcuffed before being led
away by police.
In a message on a Foreign Ministry Twitter account focusing on citizens traveling abroad, the ministry said on Saturday:
"For
citizens traveling outside the country, and in order to ensure their
safety, we point out not to wear formal dress while traveling,
especially in public places," the message dated July 2 stated, without
referring to the Avon incident.
The
Foreign Ministry, in a message posted on its website in Arabic and
English, urged citizens to abide by the laws of countries they are
visiting. It alerted women to countries in Europe whose laws prohibit
wearing of face covers, also without referring to the incident in Avon.
Local
newspapers said Avon police released the man after they realized their
mistake, but he fainted and needed hospital treatment.
Al-Bayan
reported that the citizen had hired a lawyer to pursue the case, saying
he had received no apology from either the police or the hotel.
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