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Mother And Daughter Loved The Same Man—and It Ended In Murder – Part 4

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By namhtv
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She put the revolver on the table, her hands shaking so badly she couldn’t control them.

Isabella was 10th, her second time.

The Brazilian seemed calmer than the others, her experience in fitness, where she was used to pain and pushing her body to its limits, helping her to stay in control.

She took the revolver, spun the cylinder, put it to her temple, and pulled the trigger.

The cylinder spun to an empty chamber.

She handed it to Rosa.

Rosa, a Filipina.

Second round.

She was still praying, whispering words in Tagalog, her native language.

She took the gun, spun the cylinder, and put it to her temple.

Her face was wet with tears.

She pulled the trigger.

The gun did not fire.

Rosa lowered the revolver and thanked God aloud.

The 12th was Valyria, a Colombian woman, second round.

She took the revolver confidently, just like the first time.

She spun the cylinder, put it to her temple, and pulled the trigger without hesitation.

The cartridge did not fire.

The cylinder stopped at an empty chamber.

She put the gun on the table.

The 13th was Anastasia.

Second round.

The Russian woman took the revolver, her movements automatic like a robot.

She spun the cylinder, put it to her temple, and pulled the trigger.

A shot rang out.

The fourth death.

Anastasia fell backward.

Her chair tipped over.

Her body hit the floor.

Blood gushed from the wound, flooding her light hair.

Her eyes were open, staring at the ceiling.

The guards approached, lifted the body, and carried it away.

Rashid reloaded the revolver.

Six women remained.

Oxana, Isabella, Rosa, Valyria, and two others who had not made it through the second round.

Natalyia, the second Russian, 29 years old, was next.

She worked as a manager at a travel agency in Moscow, came to Dubai on a business trip, met Rasheed, and he asked her to stay.

Natalyia was pragmatic, cynical, and said that love was a myth and only money mattered.

She took the revolver, spun the cylinder, and put it to her temple.

She said aloud, “50 million.

” She pulled the trigger.

A shot rang out, “The fifth death.

” Natalyia fell forward onto the table, her blood mixing with the remains of food and broken glasses.

Her body convulsed for a few seconds, then went still.

The guards removed the body.

Rashid reloaded his weapon.

Five women remained, but one of them had not yet gone through the second round.

She was the last, the 15th overall.

Her name was Larissa, a Ukrainian woman, 28 years old, who worked as a translator and spoke four languages.

She came to Dubai for a conference, met Rashid.

He hired her as his personal translator and a month later she moved into the villa.

Larissa was educated, read books, and was interested in philosophy.

She took the revolver, looked at it, then at Rashid.

She asked, “Do you understand what you’re doing? That this will change you forever?” Rasheed smiled and replied, “I’ve already changed.

” Larissa nodded, spun the cylinder, put it to her temple, and pulled the trigger.

There was no shot.

Now all five remaining women had gone through at least two rounds.

Oxana, Isabella, Rosa, Valyria, Larissa.

Rasheed looked at them and said, “Third round.

” He handed the revolver to Oxana.

Oxana took the weapon for the third time.

Her hands were no longer shaking.

She was in a state of shock beyond fear.

She spun the cylinder, put it to her temple, and pulled the trigger.

The bullet did not fire.

She handed it to Isabella.

Isabella, third round.

She spun the cylinder, put it to her temple, and pulled the trigger.

The gun didn’t work.

She passed it to Rosa.

Rosa, third round.

She prayed, spun the cylinder, put it to her temple, and pulled the trigger.

The cylinder stopped on an empty chamber, passed it to Valyria.

Valyriia, third round.

She spun the cylinder confidently, put it to her temple, and pulled the trigger.

The revolver did not fire, passed it to Lissa.

Larissa second round for her, third in the overall sequence.

She spun the cylinder, put it to her temple, and pulled the trigger.

A shot rang out.

The sixth death.

Larissa fell forward, her face hitting the table, blood spattering everywhere, covering the remaining women.

Her body slid off the chair and fell to the floor in a position resembling prayer, her head pressed to her chest, her arms outstretched.

The guards removed the body.

Rashid reloaded the revolver.

Four women remained.

Oxana, Isabella, Rosa, Valyria.

All had gone through three rounds.

All had survived.

Rasheed looked at his watch.

It was almost midnight.

The game had lasted 2 hours.

Six women were dead.

Four were alive.

He said, “The last round.

Whoever survives will become my wife.

All four, if they are lucky, but he changed the rules.

He took a new revolver out of the box that the guard had brought.

He opened the cylinder and showed that it was empty.

He inserted two bullets instead of one.

He closed the cylinder and spun it.

He said, “Now the odds are 1 in three instead of 1 in six.

Let’s raise the stakes.

” The women looked at him, unable to protest.

They were beyond words, beyond emotions.

Oxana took the new revolver.

It was heavier than the previous one.

She spun the cylinder, put it to her temple.

Her mind was empty.

No thoughts, just mechanical action.

She pulled the trigger.

There was no shot.

She survived for the fourth time.

Isabella took the revolver, spun the cylinder, put it to her temple, and pulled the trigger.

The cartridge did not fire.

Fourth survival.

Rosa took the revolver and prayed more intensely, her lips moving quickly, the words merging into a continuous stream.

She spun the cylinder, put it to her temple, and pulled the trigger.

The revolver did not fire.

Fourth survival.

Valyria took the revolver, the last of the four.

She looked at Rasheed, then at the remaining women.

She spun the cylinder slowly, as if stretching out the moment.

She put it to her temple.

Her finger froze on the trigger.

She stared straight ahead into the void.

She pulled the trigger.

The gun did not fire.

All four women survived.

Rasheed looked at them then smiled.

He said, “Fate has chosen.

All four of you are worthy, but I only need three wives so as not to completely violate Sharia law.

So, we’ll do another round.

Just one shot between the four of you.

” The women looked at him in horror.

Okana screamed, “No, enough.

We survived.

You promised, Rasheed replied calmly.

I promised that the winners would become my wives, but I didn’t say how many winners there would be.

Three or four? I’ll decide now.

He reloaded the revolver, this time, inserting a single bullet.

He spun the cylinder.

He handed it to Oxana.

Oxana refused to take it, shaking her head and crying.

Rashid ordered a guard to come forward and he held a knife to Oxana’s throat.

Rasheed said, “Either you play or I’ll kill you right now.

Choose.

” Oxana took the revolver with trembling hands.

She spun the cylinder, put it to her temple, and pulled the trigger.

There was no shot.

She handed it to Isabella, sobbing.

Isabella took the weapon, her composure finally cracking, tears streaming down her face.

She spun the cylinder, put it to her temple, and pulled the trigger.

The cartridge did not fire.

She passed it to Rosa.

Rosa took the revolver, prayed aloud, shouting prayers.

She spun the cylinder, put it to her temple, and pulled the trigger.

The revolver did not fire.

She passed it to Valyria.

Valyria was last.

She took the revolver and looked at it for a long time.

Then she looked at Rashid.

She said quietly, “If I die, you will regret it.

” Rashid laughed and replied, “I never regret anything.

” Valyria spun the cylinder, put it to her temple, closed her eyes, and pulled the trigger.

The gun didn’t work.

All four women survived again.

Rasheed looked at them, then at the revolver.

Then he laughed.

A long, loud laugh.

He said, “Fate is clear.

All four of you will be my wives.

I will take four instead of three.

Rules are made by people.

I can change them.

” The women sat there unable to react.

Shock, exhaustion, trauma.

They were alive, but something inside them had died that night.

Rasheed ordered the guards to take them to separate rooms, give them water and sedatives.

A doctor examined each of them and gave them sedatives.

The bodies of the six dead women were taken away that same night.

Rashid’s guards took them to the desert to a place only they knew.

There the bodies were burned in specially prepared pits and the ashes were scattered on the sand.

No traces, no graves, nothing that could be found.

Four women spent the rest of the night in separate rooms of the villa under the supervision of guards.

The doctor gave each of them sedatives strong enough to help them sleep despite the horror they had experienced.

On the morning of June 24th, Rasheed gathered them in the living room.

They sat on the sofas, pale with empty eyes in the robes they had been given.

The floor of the dining room where the game had taken place had been washed, leaving no trace of blood or broken dishes.

Everything looked as if nothing had happened.

Rashid explained his plans.

He would marry all four of them within the next 2 months.

The official ceremonies would be held separately for each one in accordance with Islamic traditions and legal formalities.

Each would receive a marriage contract guaranteeing $50 million in the event of divorce.

They would live in a villa, each in her own part of the house with separate staff.

Rasheed would visit them in turn as required by Sharia law in cases of polygamy.

But there was a condition.

They had to sign a non-disclosure agreement prohibiting them from telling anyone about the events of the night of June 23rd.

If even one of them broke their silence, the contract for all four would be nullified, they would be immediately deported without compensation, and Rashid would use all his connections to prosecute them for defamation and breach of contract.

In addition, he hinted that the women’s families could suffer if the information became public.

The women signed the documents.

They had no choice.

They were in a foreign country without money or connections under the control of a man with enormous power and influence.

Refusing meant returning home empty-handed after everything they had been through.

Signing meant gaining wealth, but living with the memories of six dead women.

The weddings took place between August and October 2018.

Oxana was the first to marry.

The ceremony was held in a private residence with the participation of a religious figure who received a generous reward for keeping quiet about the fact that this was the fifth wife, not the fourth.

Isabella got married in September.

Rosa and Valyria in October.

Each ceremony was registered separately in different emirates to avoid questions from the authorities about the number of wives.

Officially, four women became the wives of Rashid al-Maktum.

The contracts were drawn up by lawyers, each document guaranteeing $50 million in the event of divorce, plus monthly maintenance, housing, cars, and servants.

On paper, it looked like a fairy tale about poor girls who became princesses.

In reality, it was a cage built of trauma and fear.

In the first few months after the weddings, the women hardly communicated with each other.

Each lived in her own part of the villa, met with Rashid on schedule, and fulfilled the role of a wife.

But at night, they were haunted by nightmares.

Oxana woke up from dreams where she saw Karina falling with a bullet in her head, blood flooding the table.

Isabella couldn’t look at metal objects without panicking.

Any glint of metal reminded her of the revolver.

Rosa prayed for hours every day, trying to atone for the guilt of being the survivor.

Valyria began taking large doses of sleeping pills so she wouldn’t see the faces of the dead women.

Rasheed behaved as if nothing had happened.

He was attentive, generous, bought gifts, organized trips.

For him, the game was over.

He got what he wanted and moved on.

His friends, the eight men who were present that night, were also silent.

They were bound by a shared secret that could destroy their lives if it became public.

But Oxana couldn’t live with it.

She was the youngest, 23 years old, and the trauma was destroying her from within.

6 months after the wedding in February 2019, she began looking for a way out of the situation.

She couldn’t just tell the police.

She had no evidence.

The bodies were gone.

There were no video recordings and the other participants would deny everything.

It would be her word against that of one of the most influential people in Dubai.

Oxana began to explore her options.

She understood that she needed evidence, something tangible that could not be denied.

She remembered seeing one of Rashid’s friends, Sed filming something on his phone during the game.

She wasn’t sure if it was a video or just photos, but it was her only chance.

In March 2019, Oxana contacted a hacker she found through a friend from Ukraine via an encrypted app.

The hacker, who went by the pseudonym Siri, agreed to hack Sed’s phone for $50,000.

Oxana paid from her monthly allowance, which Rasheed transferred to her account.

The process took two months.

The hacker used a fishing attack, sending Sed a fake message from the bank that contained malware.

When Sed opened the link on his phone, the program gained access to the files.

The hacker copied all the contents of the phone, including photos and videos from the past year.

In May 2019, Oxana received the files.

Among thousands of photos and videos, she found what she was looking for.

A video file 2 hours and 17 minutes long filmed on June 23rd, 2018, starting at 9:00 pm The quality was average.

The phone was held in someone’s hand, and the image sometimes shook, but everything was visible and audible.

The video showed the entire game from start to finish.

Rashid explains the rules.

The women take turns with the revolver.

Shots are fired.

Karina, Amina, Nina, Anastasia, Natalia, and Larissa are killed.

Screams, crying, blood on the table.

Rashid and his friends sitting in chairs watching, comments, laughter, bets among themselves on who would survive.

Everything was recorded.

Oxana copied the video onto several flash drives and hid them in different places.

Then she started thinking about what to do with it.

Going to the Dubai police was risky.

Rashid had connections in the police.

The story could be buried and Oxana would disappear.

She decided she needed to make it public.

So public that the authorities couldn’t ignore it.

In June 2019, Oxana created an anonymous email address through a service that protects confidentiality.

She sent the video to several international media outlets at once.

The Guardian in the UK, Al Jazzer in Qatar, the New York Times in the US, Dear Spiegel in Germany, and Leond in France.

In the letter, she briefly described the situation, gave the names of those involved, the date of the event, and the location.

She did not reveal her identity, signing as a witness.

Al Jazzer was the first to respond.

Journalists checked the video for authenticity, making sure it had not been edited or altered.

They identified Rashid al-Maktum by his face and confirmed that it was indeed him.

On June 23rd, 2019, exactly one year after the event, Alazer published an article on its website with the headline, “Dubai billionaire forced women to play Russian roulette for the right to become his wife.

” The video was posted online with the victim’s faces blurred to protect their identities, but the faces of Rashid and his friends were clearly visible.

The article was accompanied by an investigation in which journalists identified some of the deceased women by comparing them with missing persons reports.

The families of Karina, Amina, Nina, Anastasia, Natalia, and Lissa were found and interviewed.

All confirmed that their daughters had been working in Dubai and had disappeared in the summer of 2018.

The reaction was immediate and global.

The video went viral, garnering 50 million views in the first 48 hours.

The hashtag with Rashida’s name became a trend on social media around the world.

Human rights organizations demanded an investigation.

The governments of several countries where the deceased women came from sent official requests to the UAE authorities.

The Dubai authorities came under enormous pressure.

It was an international scandal that threatened the Emirates’s reputation as a safe place for tourists and expatriots.

On June 25th, police arrested Rashid al-Maktum at his home.

At the same time, eight of his friends who had been present at the villa that night were also arrested.

The investigation was conducted behind closed doors.

The UAE authorities tried to minimize publicity, but information continued to leak out.

It became known that the bodies of six women had indeed been destroyed in the desert.

The location was found based on the testimony of one of Rashid’s security guards, who agreed to cooperate with the investigation in exchange for a reduced sentence.

The remains of bones and teeth were found at the site, which were identified through dental records as belonging to the missing women.

Rashid’s four surviving wives were questioned by the police.

Oxana, Isabella, Rosa, and Valyria gave detailed testimony, confirming everything that was on the video.

Their testimonies matched in every detail.

The doctor who was present at the villa was also arrested and gave testimony, admitting his role.

The trial of Rashid al-Maktum began in October 2019 in a special criminal court in Dubai.

The trial was closed to the public, but information leaked through lawyers and journalists who had sources in the judicial system.

The prosecution brought six counts of firstdegree murder, coercion to participate in a dangerous game, illegal possession of weapons, destruction of evidence, and other crimes.

Rashid’s defense attempted to challenge the video, claiming that it had been edited, that the women had participated voluntarily, and that it was a game that everyone had agreed to.

But expert analysis confirmed the authenticity of the video, and the testimony of the surviving women refuted the claim that it was voluntary.

They described threats of deportation, knives to their throats, and an atmosphere of terror.

The trial lasted 4 months.

On February 27th, 2020, the verdict was handed down.

Rashid al-Maktum was found guilty on all counts.

The judge sentenced him to life imprisonment without the right to early release.

It was not the death penalty that the victim’s families and international organizations had demanded.

But in the UAE, death sentences for people from influential families are extremely rare.

Eight of Rashid’s friends received various sentences ranging from 10 to 25 years for complicity in the crime, failure to assist the victims, and concealment of evidence.

The doctor received 15 years.

The guards who were directly involved in disposing of the bodies received sentences ranging from 7 to 12 years.

After the verdict was handed down, the four surviving women left the UAE.

Their marriage contracts were enulled by the court and the promised $50 million each was not paid.

As the contracts were concluded under duress and were part of a criminal scheme, Rashid’s assets were frozen and most of them went to pay compensation to the victim’s families.

Oxana was granted asylum in Norway where she had a distant relative.

The Norwegian government awarded her $1 million in compensation for the trauma she had suffered and also paid for psychological help.

Isabella returned to Brazil where she received similar compensation from the Brazilian government and protection from possible persecution.

Rosa left for Canada where the Filipino community helped her settle in and find a job.

Valyria settled in Spain where the Colombian government provided her with security and financial support.

All four women gave interviews to various media outlets telling their stories.

They talked about how they fell into a trap of greed and naivity, how dreams of wealth led them into a nightmare, how they survived thanks to luck rather than personal qualities.

They talked about the six women who died, and how no amount of money is worth a human life.

The families of the deceased women filed a class action lawsuit against Rashid al-Maktum’s estate.

In July 2020, the court ruled to pay each family $20 million in compensation for a total of $120 million.

The money was taken from Rashid’s frozen assets, including the sale of his hotels, villas on Palm Jira, and investment portfolios.

The story has been widely covered in documentaries and books.

Netflix released a documentary series in 2021 called The Shakes Bet, which featured interviews with survivors, victims, families, investigators, and women’s rights experts.

The series sparked discussions about the status of migrant women in the Gulf countries, the Kafala system, which gives employers enormous power over foreign workers, and the culture of impunity for wealthy people.

Under pressure from the international community, the UAE government amended its legislation.

Rules were tightened to control private homes and villas where people could be held against their will.

The police created a special unit to investigate cases of human trafficking and forced labor.

Stricter penalties were introduced for crimes against foreign workers.

But for the four women who survived, no laws could bring back what they had lost.

In an interview with the Guardian in 2022, Oxana said that every night she wakes up from nightmares in which she is holding a revolver to her temple again, hears the metallic sound of the spinning cylinder, and sees the faces of dead women.

No amount of money, no amount of justice can erase the memories of that night.

Isabella returned to work as a fitness instructor in Rio de Janeiro, but admitted that she cannot stay in closed spaces for long without starting to panic.

That sometimes she sees men on the street who resemble Rashid or his friends, and she is overcome with fear.

Rosa has dedicated her life to working with victims of domestic violence and human trafficking in Toronto, saying that helping others helps her cope with her own trauma.

Valyria wrote a book about her experience, which became a bestseller in Spain and has been translated into 12 languages.

The families of the six women who died used the compensation they received in different ways.

Karina’s parents in Ukraine set up a charitable foundation to help young women who want to go abroad to work, providing them with information about the risks and legal support.

Amina’s family in Morocco built a school for girls in their village, naming it after their deceased daughter.

Nah’s parents in Thailand used the money to educate their younger children and help the local community.

Rashid al-Maktum is serving a life sentence in a maximum security prison in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi.

He is reportedly being held in a separate cell for security reasons as other prisoners have threatened to kill him.

His family has publicly disowned him, saying that his actions are a disgrace to the family and contrary to Islamic values.

His former official wives have divorced him and received compensation under their marriage contracts.

The story of 12 women gathered for dinner, half of whom died in a game invented by a wealthy man, has become a symbol of the extremes to which power and wealth can go when they are not restrained by morality or law.

It showed the dark side of a world of luxury and privilege, where human life becomes a stake in a game, where fates are decided by the spin of a revolver cylinder.

For the surviving women, the story did not end with the verdict or compensation.

They continue to live with the consequences of what they have experienced.

But they also became voices speaking on behalf of those who cannot speak for themselves, reminding the world of the six women whose lives were cut short for the sake of one man’s twisted whim.

And that justice, even if belated, is still possible when there is the courage to speak the truth despite fear and threats.

 

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