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They Kidnapped Young Women in Dubai! They Tortured Them on Camera and Performed Ritual Sacrifices!

They Kidnapped Young Women in Dubai! They Tortured Them on Camera and Performed Ritual Sacrifices!

PART1

In early 2024, a strange series of missing person reports began circulating in the media.  Several young women, mostly models or girls dreaming of the modeling business, left for Dubai at the tempting invitations and then stopped communicating.  The first suspicions were expressed by the missing women’s loved ones, relatives, friends, and agents who were faced with the fact that their phones were switched off, social media was silent, and the girls themselves, apparently, had disappeared.

  It didn’t immediately attract the attention of the press, as tourists in Dubai often go missing for mundane reasons, are detained without notice, lose documents, and so on.  But by late winter, the number of such stories had increased, and journalists began to connect the dots between facts that seemed to fit a pattern.

  One of the first to sound the alarm was Monica Sold, an A&R manager for the modeling agency Global Vision.  She noticed that three girls, all from her base, had disappeared in a short period of time.  Lauren Stewart, 21, from Seattle, Clara Hill, 20, from Madrid, and Aisha Amber, 22, from London.  They all allegedly went to a closed photo shoot and a high fee in the UAE.

  Monica managed to extract a message from one of them before the connection was lost, which featured an unknown organization that promised incredible income and participation in a special project with Arab sheikhs.  Monica herself contacted the police in the US and Spain, but they only shrugged their shoulders.

  The missing persons were outside their jurisdiction and no formal crime reports were filed.   It would seem like another story about unsuccessful contracts abroad, if not for the repeating details.  All the girls had made new acquaintances shortly before their disappearance, introducing themselves as recruiters from prestigious Dubai agencies.

  They talked about lavish parties, elite shows, colossal rates for a week’s work.  At the same time, the girls were instructed not to disclose the location or details of the contract, so as not to lose money.   At least, this is what Monica claimed after studying the correspondence of the missing people.   The rumors gradually reached the ears of Andrei Nolan, a freelance journalist from the United States who specialized in criminal investigations and human trafficking.

  Nolan contacted Monica Sold and found out that there were at least five missing models.  All in the age range of 20 to 23 years.  Everyone left for Dubai between January and March.  Nobody had a set route. Visas were obtained through intermediaries. The tickets were paid for by unknown sponsors.

  But he assumed that there was a criminal network operating in the Emirates, but he did not understand the scale. He tried to check information about them with his diplomatic acquaintances, but they only shrugged their shoulders. We have heard of isolated cases, but there is no evidence that they were kidnapped or killed.

  The missing persons could have easily left for the islands or some other country, so no formal investigation was opened. But he stubbornly continued to sound the alarm, appealing to colleagues in Europe.  It was then that he received an anonymous email, signed by a digital witness, which spoke of a sect or cult in Dubai associated with brutal rituals, where victims are sacrificed for some ritual, and photos of the abuse are put up for sale on the Darknet.

  It sounded amazingly wild.  It seemed like we were still living in the Middle Ages, but the handwriting on the letter was convincing.  The author himself has seen horrific things and fears for his life.  In April 2024, another girl, Elaine Blair, 23, from Sweden, went missing. Her sister, Julia Blair, created a stir on social media by publishing Elaine’s correspondence.

There were mentions of a certain secret club and an obligation to keep secrets, otherwise there would be no fees.  The club was called Orion, and it was this word that caught the attention of journalist Andre Nolan.  While conducting his own private search, he came across old forum posts mentioning a closed group called “Orion Stars,” which had allegedly existed in the region since the early 2000s.

  It was said that this sect was involved in occult rituals, loved to use religious objects in its orgies and practiced sacrifice.  Half-truth, half-legend.  For a long time, such stories were told as urban myths.  No one presented any concrete evidence, but the new disappearances of models were alarming. Maybe there is something real behind this after all .

  It is at this time that the news appears.  A young woman, Evelyn Holm, was brought to a private clinic in Dubai in serious condition with signs of violence.  Officially, she was listed as the victim of a domestic conflict, but people from the clinic let it slip that she had been brought in by suspicious individuals who then disappeared.

  Evelyn was from Norway two weeks ago, and her social media posts about flying on a VIP flight to Dubai suspiciously matched the stories of the other missing persons.  Nolan, through a chain of acquaintances, followed this trail, but, alas, by the time of his visit the girl had already been discharged in an unknown direction.

PART2

  Attempts to find out her condition were met with empty excuses.  It seemed as if someone was constantly clearing up evidence by moving potential witnesses.  By May 2024, rumors about a certain Dubai-based sectarian community were actively circulating on the internet.  Details about it varied.  Some said that they worship ancient pagan gods there and perform bloody rituals.

  Others claimed that it was merely a cover for brutal orgies and violence, disguised as mystical rituals.  In general, there was only one thing left.  The cult selected its victims from among model-looking girls, promised them luxurious conditions, and then enslaved them .  Some stories included allegations that victims were tortured, photographed during their ordeal, and the footage sold on darknet platforms for huge profits.

  The UAE authorities, as expected, denied everything. Officials said: “We have no data on such crimes. This is fake news.”  But some diplomats from Western countries have become extremely cautious with any scandalous requests.  Having strong economic ties, they avoided making a fuss so as not to spoil relations.  And if someone raised the issue at the consular level, they received a formal response.

Thus, any thread leading to the solution of the sect was broken as soon as it came to public steps.  But still, one loud event happened.  Joyce Harris.  An Australian woman miraculously escaped the ceremony in early June 2024.  She later gave anonymous interviews to a couple of journalists, including Nolan.

  Joyce said that she met a certain Samir in Dubai, who introduced himself as a manager, but in fact dragged her to a villa where there were several other young women.  There, Joyce encountered them being forced to dress in strange outfits, paint their bodies with symbols, and talk about preparing for rituals.  If the girls did not agree, they were beaten and threatened with knives.

“The worst thing,” she claimed, “was that moans and women’s screams could sometimes be heard behind the wall , but the guards wouldn’t let anyone out. They said that a great sacrifice was about to take place. Joyce, scared to death, pretended to be humble, slipped the guard some sleeping pills, which she miraculously had left, and escaped at night.

But before leaving the villa, she looked into one of the rooms for a minute and saw a tortured body there and several people bent over it, as if performing a ritual. As soon as she got out of the gate, she barely managed to stop a taxi and go to another Emirate. And from there, a day later, she flew home.

 Her story is one of the first in which the clear phrase “sect” appeared in the context of Dubai’s atrocities. She described how the leaders called themselves servants of the colossus of the desert and wore special amulets with signs similar to Arabic ones, but with additional pointed symbols. According to Joyce, these  People clearly believed in some ancient force that demanded blood sacrifices.

 The transformation of a real criminal group into a cult or vice versa was unclear from the outside. Perhaps it was just a cover for trading content, torture, and murder, but the outcome for the victims did not change. Sienna Green, 20, from New York, was one of the few who agreed to give a written testimony, albeit anonymously under a pseudonym.

 According to Sienna, in May she flew to an invited event related to high fashion and shows. When she arrived, she was met by people introducing themselves as organizers and taken to a luxurious villa. The first few days, everything looked like a typical elite party: swimming pools, hookahs, VIP guests. But one night, Sienna was woken up by some people in black robes who said: “Quick, put this on.

” They threw something like a transparent dress and dragged her into the room where the other girls were. There, everyone was standing in a circle, and in the middle was An altar with incomprehensible symbols. The music was strange, hypnotic. Rhythmic howls emanated from the speakers. Sienna and three others were led to the center and forced to kneel.

 One of those present, apparently the leader, began to chant something in Arabic, then switched to broken English. You women are created for service. Panic gripped Sinna. The next hours were hell. They were forcibly stripped, someone recorded them on camera, ordered to perform perverted acts, and those who resisted were beaten with a baton or a stun gun.

 Sinna cried and trembled. She was tied to a pole and knocked down, leaving burns from the electrical contact. She noticed one of the cameramen taking a lot of photos, saying something about selling exclusive items. As soon as the ritual was coming to an end, those who remained conscious were injected with some kind of drug that made everything swim before their eyes.

 Sienna doesn’t know how much time passed.  She woke up in a locked room, surrounded by other girls moaning, some with bruises and bloody wounds. They were brought food once a day, making them look like raw material ready for the next ceremony. A few days later, Sienna had a chance to escape when a guard was distracted, but she tripped on the threshold and was captured again.

 This time, she was punished even more severely, burning her skin with a smoldering brand. The girl decided to feign submission. It was later discovered that on certain days, potential content buyers or ritual participants arrived and then staged a show of public humiliation. Sina was lucky to survive because, apparently, no one chose her as a victim for the final ritual.

 According to rumors, such rituals ended in murder. She ended up in a group that was being prepared for subsequent resale elsewhere. At the moment the girls were loaded into a van, a conflict broke out with some local gang, apparently competitors or the police.  An ambush. A shootout ensued, and in the confusion, Sienna jumped out, breaking her arm, but managed to reach the road, where locals helped her .

 They were afraid to contact the police, however, and simply took her to the nearest clinic. From there, with the help of American friends, she fled the country, avoiding further persecution. Returning to New York, Sienna gave testimony to several human rights activists and lawyers, but they shrugged their shoulders.

 “Without specific names and locations, we can’t do much, and your scars and story are just a drop in the ocean. An international investigation isn’t opened without pressure from Meade.” Sienna realized that her story could remain just a nightmarish memory, but she risked sending materials to bloggers in the hopes that it would somehow influence the public.

Her fragmentary confessions were published here and there , but everything quickly drowned out in other news. Sienna is currently undergoing treatment with a psychotherapist. She has scars and burns on her body. It’s difficult for her to talk about the ritual because  that the nightmares return every time.

 She only persistently warns: “Girls, don’t fall for the fairytale life.  There might be a real cult waiting there.  Not just bandits, but people who believe in some kind of rituals with blood and death.” Kimberly George, 22, from Australia, also found herself on the list of survivors after a clash with a cult group in Dubai.

 She went there on a contract with a pseudo-action agency. At first, everything went like a normal job. A couple of photo shoots on the beach, visits to nightclubs. Until one evening, she was told that there was a VIP guest who wanted exclusive communication. She, accustomed to escorts, thought it was a standard service – to drink, talk, be beautiful.

 But everything turned out much worse. She was taken outside the city, where there were people in long robes. Upon seeing her, they began to discuss something in a different language. Kimberly caught the words: “Cursed, unclean, cleansing victim.” First, they gave her a bitter-tasting liquid to drink, after which her consciousness became slightly clouded. Then came the threats.

 They stripped her naked and shouted offensive words about  They were selling her body and she was sinful. Kimberly suspected there was more to it than just violence. They seemed to believe they were participating in a ritual to rid her of impurity. They beat her with sticks and burned her skin with hot rods in the shape of strange symbols.

 Then someone held up a camera and took pictures, saying that these photos were worth a lot in a private club. The girl almost lost hope, but she was only designated as a ritual cleanser, not a sacrifice, apparently. The next morning, she was thrown into a communal basement, where she saw several other victims crying in pain.

 One girl had a deep wound, and another had a symbol carved into her chest. Some died in agony, their bodies taken away to an unknown location. Kimberly survived because the cult decided to spare her, perhaps to later sell her to another country. She spent about a week in captivity, where she was abused every day and filmed for buyers.

She doesn’t know if the video survived.  But she was firmly convinced that some of the photos were definitely sent to someone through encrypted channels. Her mind swung between pain and fear. Finally, one night, they moved a group of girls, including Kimberly, into a van to take them to the auction.

 The road led through a deserted area, and there they were stopped by a patrol. It is unclear whether it was random or directed by someone. A conflict ensued. The guards tried to bribe them. Then someone opened fire. The confusion allowed Kimberly to jump out and run. She was picked up by a passing car. The driver took her to the suburbs, from where she called the embassy.

 Once at the Australian embassy, ​​the girl told her story, showing scars and burn marks, but the outcome was the same. Everything was filed as kidnapping. They promised to look into the matter. However, not a single high-profile trial took place after this. Official comment: the investigation is ongoing.

 Kimberly returned to Australia, where she received treatment for her injuries. Publicly  She was afraid to speak out for a long time , but after seeing so many such cases , she decided to give an anonymous interview. In it, she admitted: “The scariest thing isn’t what they did, but that they believed in the ritual.

”  They believe that they are cleansing the world of vicious women.  They don’t need money.  They need sadistic power over life.  And photography is a business that adds profit.  To complete the picture, it is necessary to describe a fatal case where the victim did not survive.  Natalie West, 21, from Bristol, UK, previously worked part-time in clubs and dreamed of a career as a model.

  In the summer of 2024 I went to Dubai.  No one has seen her since landing at the airport.  The only thing her friends discovered later was her last post on social media.  Hello, Dubai. Meet me in all style.  About two weeks later, the relatives became alarmed.  Later, an anonymous user on a darknet forum mentioned that she had seen a young Englishwoman being held in the basement of a religious building.

  There were also strange altar things there.  In the autumn of that year, an archive of photographs with the caption “The Sacrifice of an English Doll” surfaced on the Darknet.  According to the descriptions, they depict a girl.  similar in appearance to Natalie. Several torture shots and the climactic murder sequence.

  There are more than 30 photographs in total.  After comparing their appearances in the editors, some acquaintances said that it was definitely Natalie.  But no one officially acknowledged the evidence , and any report to the police was met with the response: “The photos could be fake. We need a source.”  The result: Natalie’s body was never found, and her case went cold.

  According to one version, it was in this case that the cult performed a full sacrificial ceremony, after which it removed all traces.  According to those who saw the photo in person, the scene was so horrific that even experienced forensic experts who accidentally saw the footage asked not to describe the details publicly.

  Darknet criminal channels typically sold these photos for large sums of money.  This confirmed that the rituals were not only religious and sadistic, but also commercially oriented.  Why were the culprits never found?  As is usually the case in such stories, there are several versions: political cover, Dubai is a major global financial center.

  If a scandal breaks out about cult rituals and human trafficking, it will undermine the reputation.  The authorities prefer to remain silent, insisting that there is no evidence and that another country should open a case.  Corruption and connections. The organizers of a cult or gang may have patrons among influential individuals.

  Large kickbacks and bribes are possible, thanks to which the local police do not touch strangers, and if something comes to light, they limit themselves to a formal investigation.  Dispersed, affected victims, especially foreign women, are afraid to testify or lack the resources.  Sometimes their bodies simply don’t exist , there’s no report, and everything is written off as missing.

  So no one received a resounding sentence.  There is a suspicion that individual perpetrators are sometimes detained, but this does not concern the top brass of the sect.  Journalist Andre Nolan, who compiled the dossier, later admitted: “I came to the realization that all the threads lead to people no agency would dare to oppose.

 These are big shots, capable of buying their silence.”  At the end of 2024, the wave of disappearances began to subside or ceased to appear in the information field.  Perhaps the cult has become inactive or has found more covert ways to lure victims.  Still, rumors appear from time to time. The girl has disappeared again, and the darknet is selling torture photos again.

  But it never became a major international investigation. Survivors like Sienna and Kimberly try to rebuild their lives while dealing with the trauma.  They periodically give anonymous interviews, shouting to the world: “Be careful with unverified proposals.” But most people just don’t want to take the risk.

  Those who go missing or, like Natalie, become potential victims of the ritual remain nameless tragedies.  Relatives do not lose hope, although there is virtually no chance of their loved ones returning .  The sect or group, under various pseudonyms, continues its dark deeds.  No major trial has fully exposed their crime .

  Dubai police, officials.  All this merges into a diplomatic status quo.  The only legacy that has emerged is a morbid caution among the modeling community.  A warning is being posted in chats and Telegram channels that some contracts in Dubai pose a risk of falling into the hands of beasts calling themselves messengers of ancient forces.

  Many still think this is an exaggeration.  But the testimonies of the victims leave no doubt. Better to be safe than sorry, than to end up in the basement of a bloodthirsty cult.  Even as 2024 draws to a close, with news swirling everywhere , the story of the Dubai cult remains one of the most terrifying and mysterious.  Without official recognition and with a wealth of conflicting evidence, the tragedies of the young girls continue to puzzle researchers.  and journalists.

  Their names may never be known to the world. But a series of photographs and rumors about eerie rituals will roam the vastness of the dark web.  The perpetrators were never publicly punished.  Their names are hidden, and the formal leaders, if they were arrested, managed to escape or went into hiding under the protection of influential patrons.

  Occasionally a memory of the Orion stars or a cult where girls serve as ritual objects and torture is turned into a commodity surfaces, and the world, absorbed in global events, pays attention only for a moment before being distracted again.  Thus ends this dark story, which, alas, may be closer than we would like to believe.

  It leaves an unresolved question.  Is it really possible in the 21st century to perform bloody rituals on kidnapped people with impunity, turning suffering into a commodity for the Darknet?  Until there are high-profile convictions and interstate efforts, the answer appears to remain frighteningly simple.  Yes, you can.

  And this is the most terrible thing about the legend about the sectarian group in Dubai.  a legend whose actual revelation never took place.  That’s all for now , friends.  Share your thoughts in the comments, give it a like if you found it interesting, and see you in the next episode.  Bye.

 

Disclaimer : This content may be created by AI for entertainment purposes. Any resemblance to real persons, events, or places is coincidental.