Murang’a family held in Dubai over Sh1.5 million

A Murang’a family held in Dubai is looking for government’s mediation to have their visas discharged after they were taken over Sh1.5 million in house rent arrears.

Mwaura Muteria’s family has been hoping for tolerance from Dubai specialists yet their demand has failed to attract anyone’s attention. The family, that hails from Murang’a region, has been in Dubai for over a decade.

Muteria disclosed to People Daily yesterday that inconvenience began in 2016 when an association he was working with as a task chief ended his agreement.

He, in any case, remained in Dubai with the desire for landing another position. Inferable from financial problems, the family defaulted on their lease in 2017 and checks issued to the proprietor bouncedback.

The proprietor recorded a criminal body of evidence against Muteria while he was in Kenya and upon his arrival, he was captured.

I confessed and petitioned be discharged against my international ID with the goal that I could search for a vocation and begin paying the cash owed to the proprietor. Be that as it may, I have not been lucky to find a new line of work over the most recent three years.

Mwaura Muteria

In any case, in February, a year ago he got an offer letter with Oxfam International as a local wellbeing security consultant, yet this was brief.

In any case, following a few endeavors, he a month ago got an offer letter in another association and should migrate to Yemen. He should answer to work this Friday however is concerned that he may lose it once more.

Despite the fact that we had paid piece of our lease in real money, the landowner disclosed to me that every legitimate charge and the returned checks must be ponied up all required funds previously he pulls back the case and travel prohibition on my name. They are guaranteeing about Sh1.5 million (AED55,000). I have no capacity to raise this sum and we are looking for help to balance the bill,”

Muteria said their living arrangement visas are lapsing this week, which implies they may be compelled to pay movement outstay fines of up to Sh2,000 except if they leave the nation inside seven days

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