Dubai Prosecution referred them to the "criminal"

Employee and driver forging residence visas and entry permits

The Dubai Public Prosecution referred a Gulf employee and an Arab driver to the Criminal Court on charges of forging electronic entry permits attributed to the General Administration of Residency and Foreigners Affairs, for a fee of between 10,000 and 20,000 dirhams per visa.

A witness from the General Administration of Residency said that reliable source information was received by the administration about a person forging entry permits issued to the administration in exchange for money, so an ambush was prepared for him through a source who agreed to obtain two work visas, and to deliver the accused 32 thousand dirhams, and he was arrested .

He added that by searching the accused, he was found in possession of a bag containing original passports and a number of forged entry permits, and he admitted that he was forging these visas with the help of the second accused (Arab-driver), in exchange for sums ranging between 10 thousand and 20 thousand dirhams for one visa, pointing out that The fraud was carried out by phone, so the second accused was ambushed and arrested.

For his part, the second defendant said in the inference report, during his interrogation by the concerned department, that he was using a smart phone application to change the visa data and personal photo, and received in return a recent phone.

The Dubai Public Prosecution stated that six forged entry permits were seized with the names of people of different nationalities, who cooperated with the accused, and talks were held between them containing details of the visas to be forged and pictures of the funds that were obtained. Formal.

• The two defendants charge from 10,000 to 20 thousand dirhams for the visa.

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