Skip to main content

Moroccan woman in UAE butchered and cooked lover


A Moroccan woman in her 30s was arrested in the United Arab Emirates on suspicion of killing her boyfriend of seven years after he told her of his plans of marrying another Moroccan. She killed her boyfriend three months ago, but the murder was only recently uncovered, when a human tooth was found inside her blender. Her lover whom she claimed to have supported financially throughout their relationship also hailed from Morocco.
According to an Abu Dhabi state-owned newspaper, The National, she confessed her crime to the police, calling it a moment of "insanity". She admitted she wanted revenge for being dumped. Her and her deceased boyfriend's names were not mentioned by the newspaper. The paper reveals that the man's death came to light in recent days when the man's brother - an Ajman resident - went looking for him at their home in the city of Al Ain, and found a human tooth in a blender.
The man then reported his brother's disappearance to the police. DNA tests carried out by the police on the tooth confirmed that the tooth belonged to the man's brother. When questioned by the man's brother, she initially said she had kicked him out of the house several months before, but admitted to killing the man under police questioning - after she had collapsed.
She killed, butchered and cooked her lover and served his remains in a traditional rice and meat dish known as machboos. She served his remains to a group of unsuspecting Pakistani workers near her home. She was assisted by a friend in getting her apartment rid of blood and her lover's remains after cutting him up.

Police said the woman is due for trial once a full investigation is done. For now, she has been sent to hospital for mental health evaluation.


Comments

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Popular Posts

Princess Qajar - The Revolutionary Persian Princess

Zahra Khanom Tadj es-Saltaneh commonly referred to as Princess Qajar was a princess and memoirist of the Qajar Dynasty. Princess Tadj was one of the best known daughters of the Persian king, Naser al-Din Shah Qajar who ruled Persia from 1848 to May 1896. The Persian princess was born on February 4, 1883 and died on January 25, 1936, in Tehran, at the age of 52. Princess Qajar revolutionized beauty standards with her full look and ragged unibrow, and her unmistakably evident mustache. She was a true epitome of beauty at her time. Princess Qajar was declared a symbol of beauty in Persia and was coveted by many men. Thousands of men wanted to marry her, 13 of whom committed suicide upon being rejected by the princess. Princess Qajar eventually married Amir Hussein Khan Shoja'-al Saltaneh and had they had four children - two boys and two girls. They later got divorced in 1907 after enduring an unloving arranged marriage - she married Khan when she was 13. The princess argued f...

The Lehman Brothers Scandal (2008)

Company Background : Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. was a firm specialized in the provision of global financial services. It was founded in Montgomery, Alabama, in the United States of America. The company had headquarters in New York City, New York, in the U.S. It ceased operations in 2008. The founders were: Henry Lehman, Emmanuel Lehman and Mayer Lehman. What Happened? Lehman Brothers hid over $50 billion in loans disguised as sales. They allegedly sold toxic assets [1] to Cayman Island Banks with the understanding that they would eventually be rebought. How they were caught : Their bankruptcy led to the discovery of the fraud. They filed for bankruptcy in 2008, which is the largest bankruptcy ever recorded. Their case was larger than that of Enron, Washington Mutual, WorldCom and GM combined.  On September 15, 2008, Lehman brothers filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection  (Montgomery, n.d.) . Their bankruptcy filing came in as a blow to the financial indu...

The finger-cutting tradition of Indonesia's Dani tribe

The death of a loved one is always an extremely painful thing to bear, and people of different cultures grieve in diverse ways, some more unique than others. A typically unique way of grieving is that of the Dani (an Indonesian tribe). Finger-cutting is a fundamental part of grieving for women of the Dani tribe, and pertains to their women only. According to The Globe and Mail, an estimated 250,000 Dani tribe members live in a town named Wamena, in the extremely remote central highland area of Papua Province. Wamena is only accessible by plane.  Upon the death of a loved one, the top joint of one of a woman's fingers would be amputated, and smear ashes and clay across their faces. Prior to amputation, a string would be firmly tied to the upper half of the woman's finger for 30 minutes, to cause numbness. This was to reduce the pain from amputating the tip. In most cases, the responsibility of cutting off the top joint of the finger is assigned to one of the woman's...