<p>The emirate of Dubai announced Tuesday it will deport a number of people arrested for public debauchery after a naked photo shoot.</p>.<p>Photos and video footage posted online last week showed at least 18 foreign women posing naked in an apartment in the Dubai Marina area.</p>.<p>"The public prosecution office has completed investigations on a recently publicised photo shoot, which contravened UAE law," the Dubai Media Office said in a tweet.</p>.<p>"The individuals involved will be deported from the United Arab Emirates. No further comment shall be made on the matter."</p>.<p>Dubai police issued a statement on Saturday that a group of people who appeared in an "indecent video" shared online were arrested.</p>.<p>It warned that such behaviour was "unacceptable" and did "not reflect the values and ethics of Emirati society".</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/russian-arrested-for-filming-naked-women-on-dubai-balcony-971059.html" target="_blank">Russian arrested for filming naked women on Dubai balcony</a></strong></p>.<p>Dubai, one of the seven emirates that make up the UAE, is best known for its palm-shaped islands, over-the-top luxury hotels and parties.</p>.<p>More than 90 percent of the emirate's 3.3 million population are foreigners.</p>.<p>While the UAE is considered one of the more open-minded Gulf nations, pornography and "any other material that may prejudice public morals" is illegal.</p>.<p>Late last year, the UAE revamped an array of laws in a social liberalisation drive designed to burnish its progressive brand.</p>.<p>While rarely enforced, it reduced sentences for so-called "honour" killings, most victims of which are women seen as having brought shame on their families.</p>.<p>Other sweeping changes include the lifting of a ban on unmarried couples living together, an easing restrictions on alcohol consumption, and the decriminalisation of suicide.</p>
<p>The emirate of Dubai announced Tuesday it will deport a number of people arrested for public debauchery after a naked photo shoot.</p>.<p>Photos and video footage posted online last week showed at least 18 foreign women posing naked in an apartment in the Dubai Marina area.</p>.<p>"The public prosecution office has completed investigations on a recently publicised photo shoot, which contravened UAE law," the Dubai Media Office said in a tweet.</p>.<p>"The individuals involved will be deported from the United Arab Emirates. No further comment shall be made on the matter."</p>.<p>Dubai police issued a statement on Saturday that a group of people who appeared in an "indecent video" shared online were arrested.</p>.<p>It warned that such behaviour was "unacceptable" and did "not reflect the values and ethics of Emirati society".</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/russian-arrested-for-filming-naked-women-on-dubai-balcony-971059.html" target="_blank">Russian arrested for filming naked women on Dubai balcony</a></strong></p>.<p>Dubai, one of the seven emirates that make up the UAE, is best known for its palm-shaped islands, over-the-top luxury hotels and parties.</p>.<p>More than 90 percent of the emirate's 3.3 million population are foreigners.</p>.<p>While the UAE is considered one of the more open-minded Gulf nations, pornography and "any other material that may prejudice public morals" is illegal.</p>.<p>Late last year, the UAE revamped an array of laws in a social liberalisation drive designed to burnish its progressive brand.</p>.<p>While rarely enforced, it reduced sentences for so-called "honour" killings, most victims of which are women seen as having brought shame on their families.</p>.<p>Other sweeping changes include the lifting of a ban on unmarried couples living together, an easing restrictions on alcohol consumption, and the decriminalisation of suicide.</p>