The Daily Telegraph newspaper reported that the Israeli police will work from the Emirates to pursue the Israeli gangs that have benefited from normalization between the two sides, in a move that the newspaper described as unprecedented cooperation.

The British newspaper pointed out that members of some of the largest gangs in Israel - such as the "Hariri and Shaya families" - are exploiting normalization to expand crime networks in the UAE away from the eyes of the Israeli authorities.

She adds that the improvement of relations between Israel and the UAE after the signing of the so-called Abraham Agreement in September last year;

It means that an Israeli police attache will be established at the consulate in Dubai in the coming weeks, according to what the newspaper revealed.

An Israeli police source said that the new annex will be vital in the continued development of relations between the two countries.

And the former Israeli Minister of Interior, Amir Ohana, said last March that the Israeli police intend to rid the UAE of "unwanted guests" who flock to the country.

The newspaper notes that since the start of flights last November, about 240,000 Israelis have visited the UAE.

The newspaper comments that the security cooperation is in contrast to the events of 2010 when Mossad agents, disguised as tennis players, assassinated Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, the leader of the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) inside a Dubai hotel.

The assassination led to a crisis in the secret relationship between the two countries, and the operation implicated other countries such as Britain, which expelled an Israeli diplomat after discovering that 12 forged British passports were used in the operation, and normalization was not fully welcomed in the Emirates, as the influx of gangsters was described as a "headache." .

It quoted Emirati political analyst Abdul-Khaleq Abdullah as saying that Israeli organized crime and criminals are a "big headache for the authorities" in the UAE, adding that "normalization has a price, and this is one of it."