# Dubai airline worker arrested after police access private WhatsApp group with bomb damage photos

_Sunday, April 19, 2026 at 7:12 PM EDT · Cybersecurity, Policy · Latest · Tier 2 — Notable_

![Dubai airline worker arrested after police access private WhatsApp group with bomb damage photos — Primary](https://images.globalplayer.com/images/806846?crop=16_9&width=1200&signature=j04FpBQ6JCKH2_YlpvLA0NQhcG0=)

An airline employee was arrested in Dubai after sharing images of bomb damage from the Middle East conflict in a private WhatsApp group with colleagues. Dubai police accessed the closed chat, saved evidence, and lured the man to a meeting where he was detained on charges including publishing information deemed harmful to state interests, which carries a maximum sentence of two years.

According to advocacy group Detained in Dubai, police "explicitly confirmed they are conducting electronic surveillance operations capable of detecting private WhatsApp messages." The group's chief executive Radha Stirling said people are being "tracked, identified, and arrested not for public statements, but for private exchanges between colleagues."

The offending image showed smoke rising above a building after March 2026 strikes and had only been shared within the private group. A police report said authorities learned of the material's existence "through electronic monitoring operations," after which a special team from the Electronic and Cybercrime Department was tasked with finding the account holder.

The United Arab Emirates government owns majority holdings in telecom companies Etisalat and Du, giving security services the power to observe communications on their networks. The Arab state has also used the Israeli-developed Pegasus spyware, which can infect devices via WhatsApp calls even if unanswered and access all messages, logs, and contacts.

Stirling said other tourists, airline crew and residents have reported being detained for sending, receiving or keeping content even when they did not share it. She called for companies like WhatsApp to answer "urgent questions about user privacy," noting that "if private communications can be detected and used as the basis for arrest by overreaching or hypersensitive states, users worldwide need clarity on how their data is being accessed."

The case was escalated to State Security Prosecution and the worker remains in detention.

## Sources

- [LBC](https://www.lbc.co.uk/article/dubai-police-spied-private-whatsapp-5HjdXwr_2/)

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Canonical: https://techandbusiness.org/newswire/08EUFJXk3wQgRnqiFQuAGY
Retrieved: 2026-04-20T02:57:02.650Z
Publisher: Tech & Business (techandbusiness.org)
