Relief for Aussie after Dubai legal fight

Australian businessman Marcus Lee says he and wife Julie just want to "get on with our lives" now the ordeal of fighting fraud charges in Dubai is over.

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Australian businessman Marcus Lee and his wife Julie arrive at the international airport in Sydney on Monday, Jan. 20, 2014 (AAP)

Australian businessman Marcus Lee says touching down on home soil feels like a dream after spending almost five years fighting fraud charges in Dubai.

"It's just overwhelming to see so many people here," Mr Lee told reporters on arriving at Sydney airport with his wife Julie on Monday morning.

"It's been what we've dreamed about for five years now, and look, even down to the last couple of days it's been quite traumatic."

Mr Lee and fellow Australian Matthew Joyce were arrested by Dubai authorities in January 2009 following an investigation by the country's Financial Audit Office over a 2007 transaction involving Gold Coast property developer Sunland.

Mr Lee spent nine months in prison, including a stint in solitary confinement, followed by more than three and a half years under effective house arrest.

On Friday, Mr Lee and his wife tried to board a flight home but were turned away by authorities.

The couple were finally allowed to leave the city one weekend after the Australian Ambassador to Dubai reportedly intervened on their behalf.

Mr Lee said he and Julie just wanted to "get on with our lives" now the ordeal was over.

"I wasn't just once acquitted in Dubai on appeal I was acquitted three times from the outset," he said after being mobbed by friends and family at Kingsford Smith Airport.

"It was very clear very early on I was clearly just doing my job and that was found in all judgments.

"I've been caught up in the middle of a grubby dispute between a lot of self-interested property developers."

Speaking alongside Julie and his lawyer John Sneddon, Mr Lee said he would be seeking damages and compensation for his ordeal under UAE labour laws.

"You can give me ... 30 million (dollars) tomorrow but how do you rebuild five years of your life? How do you get back your 40th birthday in solitary?"

The homecoming comes after a Dubai court last year convicted Mr Joyce as well as Melbourne businessman Angus Reed in absentia of duping Sunland into giving them $12 million.

Mr Lee was cleared of the charges but the Dubai Public Prosecutor appealed his acquittal.

All three were later acquitted of the charges, with Mr Joyce returning to Australia in December.

Julie described the fear the couple had experienced in Dubai as "unbelievable".

"It was totally unknown, it was totally out of the blue," she told reporters.

"It's unbelievable how tough it has been." She said the couple's Yorkshire Terrier Dudley, who had at one point delayed their exit from Dubai, was also on his way home.

"He's going through the quarantine process at the moment so he'll be with us shortly," she added.

Mr Lee's mum, Carol McKinley, said she never thought her son would get home.


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Source: AAP


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