Dr. Mohamed Al-Roken is an Emirati lawyer, academic and human rights defender from Dubai. He was a member of the International Association of Lawyers (UIA) and the International Bar Association, and the president of the UAE’s Jurists Association before its arbitrary dissolution by the authorities in 2011.
Dr. Al-Roken has authored books on human rights, constitutional law, and counterterrorism among other legal and political topics. He dedicated his career to providing legal assistance to victims of human rights violations in the UAE.
Dr. Al-Roken has played a central role in the human rights work in the UAE, for which he was nominated and selected for different human rights awards. The latest he won was the Ludovic Trarieux International Human Rights Prize in 2017.
While being internationally acclaimed, Dr. Al-Roken faced constant pressure in the UAE. In 2011, Dr. Al-Roken and 132 others, including lawyers, judges, academics and journalists, signed a petition for political reform, calling on the UAE government to grant legislative authority to the Federal National Council, and to ensure universal and free elections of its members.
Later that year, here presented a group of five activists, known as the “UAE 5”, including human rights defenders Ahmed Mansoor and Dr. Nasser Bin Ghaith, whom the authorities arrested and charged with “insulting the heads of the State”, in reference to their online activism and criticism of the government’s policy.
This was one of the countless cases Dr. Al-Roken took up despite the serious risks he was facing in doing so.
Among other human rights cases he took on was that of a group of seven Emirati activists, later known as the “UAE 7”, who were arbitrarily stripped of their nationality as a form of reprisal for their peaceful activism. Dr. Al-Roken was arrested shortly after he publicly announced his intention to appeal the presidential decree stripping them of their Emirati citizenship.
His arrest was in clear violation of UN Basic Principles on the role of Lawyers, which provides that “Governments shall ensure that lawyers are able to perform all of their professional functions without intimidation, hindrance, harassment or improper interference [and] shall not suffer, or be threatened with, prosecution or administrative, economic or other sanctions for any action taken in accordance with recognized professional duties, standards and ethics.”
On 17 July 2012, State Security officers arbitrarily arrested Dr. Al-Roken while he was driving to a Dubai police station to inquire about his son and his son-in-law, whom they arrested hours earlier. Following his arrest, Dr. Mohammed Al-Roken was detained in solitary confinement at an undisclosed location for 3 months, without access to his lawyer and his family. He was tried alongside 93 other activists, in the case that became known as the “UAE 94”.
The group faced severe charges including “plotting to overthrow the government.” During this grossly unfair trial, Dr. Al-Roken continued his activism by highlighting flaws in the administration of justice and pleaded the case of his co-defendants before the court. On 2 July 2013, the Federal Supreme Court convicted and sentenced Dr. Al-Roken to 10 years in prison.
The court also handed down prison terms between seven and fifteen years to 68 other defendants, including eight in absentia. In stark contrast to the international standards the UAE asserts it upholds, defendants did not have the right to appeal their sentences.