Less than 20 miles from Dubai's shiny centre lies a notorious prison that has been described as 'hell on earth.' The complex, which houses murderers, terrorists and rapists, is where Katie Price's husband Lee Andrews says he has been detained.The former glamour model, 47, has said Lee called her claiming to be in Al Awir prison in Dubai this morning, after he first went missing two weeks ago today.During a two-minute call from the notorious prison, she said he told her he was arrested and detained on suspicion of espionage.Lee had vanished after sending Katie a video of him hooded with his hands tied after being 'bundled into a van' and taken to a 'black site', as he tried to make his way to London to be with her last week.He sent a series of texts and voice messages to the mother of five, claiming he had been kidnapped. It is understood Lee was arrested on Thursday, May 14.Al Awir Central, nicknamed Dubai's Alcatraz, is notorious for its brutal conditions, with inmates tortured for confessions and suffering from horrific illnesses.Dangerous prisoners are kept in unsanitary and overcrowded cells, alongside expats, including British citizens, many who are held without formal charges or coerced into making confessions. The former glamour model, 47, has said Lee called her claiming to be in Al Awir prison in Dubai this morning, after he first went missing two weeks ago today A policeman enters Dubai's Al Awir central prison in the United Arab EmiratesLee is now facing what former detainees have described as inhumane conditions, where up to 15 men are forced to share a single room, sleeping on bunk beds and the floor.Expats who have previously languished in the Emirati hellhole have described horrific experiences, including Brit Albert Douglas, who was imprisoned in 2021 and spent four years in the UAE's notorious detention centres. Amongst these was Al Awir, where he spent most of his sentence before his release in December 2025.During his time there, Douglas claims he was tortured by guards, deprived of food, water and medical treatment, and witnessed the rape and suicides of fellow inmates. 'You're locked up for 23 to 24 hours a day. More often than not it's 24 hours... and there are no facilities that really exist, they have a library, you have to wait three months to go,' he told the Daily Mail.'They have a gym. I think I went twice in four years... There's nothing to look forward to, the food is inedible, every meal comes with a side order of cockroaches.'Sleep, he said, was the only way to survive.Karl Williams, a Brit who was jailed in Dubai's 'Alcatraz' for a year in 2012, revealed in his memoir how he saw men being stabbed to death, had electric shocks administered to his testicles and feared corrupt police would gang rape him.He described seeing packs of guards stood by without intervening as inmates attacked each other: 'I saw men get stabbed in the neck and others sliced down their faces. Blood splattered every surface as prisoner after prisoner was sliced.'He also said the prison was run by Russian gangsters, who would use HIV-positive inmates to rape and infect others as a means of punishment.Williams, along with fellow Brits Grant Cameron and Suneet Jeerh said they were given electric shocks and had guns held to their heads during their time in al-Awir.'They pulled down my trousers, spread my legs and started to electrocute my testicles,' Williams wrote.'It was unbelievably painful. I was so scared. I started to believe that I was going to die in that room.'Prisoners in the Al Awir jail must have a shaved head at all times, starting when they enter and they are punished if their hair gets long, while women reportedly have to wear head coverings.Punishments include bans on TV and calls to home, with phone access severely limited regardless. Prisoners are rarely allowed visitors.Letters and parcels sent to inmates are checked by the prison and carry the risk of being censored, including parts of magazines and books.While many of the most high-profile accounts of the grim conditions have come from men in recent years, the situation faced by women is feared to be even more brutal.Inmate Dinchi Lar said that in her jail there were a minimum of 10 people for three bunk beds, meaning she was forced to sleep on the floor.'There's nothing like personal space... you are sleeping and somebody is in your face. You're literally sleeping on top of another person,' she told ITV.Over three months Lar said she was only able to step outside and 'see the sun' for a 15-minute period. A doctor shows a hallway at the medical centre of Dubai's Al Awir central prison Illness is made worse by freezing temperatures and lack of nutrition, with pictures showing the grim food served to inmates (Pictured: A meal at Al Awir prison)Meanwhile, British former prisoner Zara-Jayne Moisey, who was locked up after reporting her own rape, recalled the horrific conditions she was forced to live in at the filthy Al Barsha prison.'It was the most frightening experience of my life, absolute torture, and all because I went to the police about what happened in the hotel room,' she told The Sun.'I will never forget the jail, it's the worst place I have ever been.'They kept the lights off in the day so we'd be eating in pitch blackness. Then they turned them on at night so no one could sleep.'Inmates have described both baking heat and freezing temperatures with 'extreme' air conditioning, with one saying: 'If being in prison doesn't break you, the temperature inside the prison will.'Illness is also rife in the prisons, with one British former inmate suffering from tuberculosis which he contracted while in there.Human rights campaigners say some with chronic health conditions were denied adequate medical care.A report in 2019 found that HIV patients in Al Awir were refused life-saving treatment.The cells were gripped by Covid during the pandemic as well, with cramped conditions making it impossible to social distance.Illness is made worse by freezing temperatures and lack of nutrition, with pictures showing the grim food served to inmates.Lar said inmates in her jail were not seen by a doctor unless they were 'at the point of death'.A British football coach who was jailed in Dubai after four bottles of vape liquid containing cannabis oil were found in his car also claims to have witnessed torture and said prisoners were left to die from illnesses.Relatives of inmates at Al Awir have also claimed that prisoners have been forced to sign documents in Arabic at gunpoint.Last December, 24-year-old British law student Mia O'Brian was released from Al Awir after having initially been given a life sentence for being caught with 50g of cocaine. The young woman was released thanks to a royal pardon.Sentences for drug trafficking in the UAE can include the death penalty, and possession of even the smallest amount of illegal drugs, including cannabis, can lead to a minimum 3-month prison term or a fine of between 20,000 UAE dirham (£4,000) and 100,000 UAE dirham (£20,000).Before her release, her mother described how O'Brian was living in a constant state of fear, adding that the 24-year-old had witnessed several fights and was forced to sleep on a mattress on the floor. She told the Daily Mail: ''The prison conditions are horrendous. There are no staff really and she has to bang on a big door if she needs anything.''She is absolutely devastated by what has happened. Mia is being really strong but I know she is going through a living hell.'And a British teen was jailed in Dubai for having sex with a fellow UK tourist he met on holiday last year.Marcus Fakana, 19, was arrested and imprisoned last year over a consensual holiday relationship with another British tourist who was just a few months younger than himself - a fact he was not aware of at the time. Prisoners in the Al Awir jail must have a shaved head at all times, starting when they enter and they are punished if their hair gets long (Pictured: Inmates read amid the COVID-19 pandemic, at the library of Dubai's Al Awir central prison) Katie shared her devastation in the days after Lee first went missing and she couldn't contact her husband, who she married in January after a week-long romanceThe girl was one month away from turning 18, but sex with anyone under the age of 18 is an offence in the Gulf state. They met when both their families were staying at a luxury hotel.The girl's mother reported Marcus - who was aged 18 at the time - to the UAE authorities after seeing messages between the two when she had returned to the UK.His case drew widespread attention and outrage, highlighting the UAE’s harsh laws that criminalise personal relationships and critics say disproportionately target foreign nationals.He was released in July and returned to the UK after receiving a royal pardon from Dubai's ruler, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum.An insider has claimed that Lee will be released on Monday after paying the authorities a four-figure fine.Katie shared her devastation in the days after Lee first went missing and she couldn't contact her husband, who she married in January after a week-long romance.His family, who also said they were unable to contact Lee, filed a missing person's report at the British embassy.Over the weekend, his long-suffering father Peter – who is one of the few people in Dubai to support him – told the Daily Mail Lee was arrested by the UAE authorities.The businessman said: 'Lee is OK. He has not been kidnapped but he is under arrest. I don't know on what charge.'I'm not sure where he is being held. But he will call me later today. He is not at my house,' he added.
The Dubai hellhole jail where Lee Andrews claims he has been held
The former glamour model, 47, has said Lee called her claiming to be in Al Awir prison in Dubai this morning, after he first went missing two weeks ago today.













