Dubai’s Crown Prince meets Ajman ruler on streets of London

Sheikh Hamdan bumps into the Ajman ruler near Selfridges department store on Oxford Street in the British captial London. (Screenshot/Instagram: @faz3video)
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Updated 01 September 2021
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Dubai’s Crown Prince meets Ajman ruler on streets of London

  • Sheikh Hamdan has been holidaying in the UK for a couple of weeks

LONDON: A video of Dubai Crown Prince Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed greeting the Ruler of Ajman Sheikh Humaid bin Rashid Al-Nuaimi in an apparently chance meeting on the streets of London has been released.

In the video, shared to an Instagram fan page @faz3video, Sheikh Hamdan bumps into the Ajman ruler near Selfridges department store on Oxford Street in the British captial.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by @faz3video

The crown prince also greeted Sheikh Rashid bin Humaid Al-Nuaimi, the president of the UAE Football Association.

“I couldn’t but stop when I saw you,” Sheikh Hamdan says in Arabic before kissing Sheikh Humaid on the forehead.

The crown prince has been holidaying in Britain for a couple of weeks. He recently took his son, Rashid, and daughter to see the Maktoum family racing stables, Godolphin, in Newmarket in the east of England.

Sheikh Rashid and his twin sister, Sheikha Sheikha, were born in May.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Fazza (@faz3)


Dutch couple’s marriage annulled due to ChatGPT speech

Updated 09 January 2026
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Dutch couple’s marriage annulled due to ChatGPT speech

  • The pair said “I do” and the officiant declared them “not only husband and wife, but above all a team”
  • The judge ⁠found that they had not actually sworn to fulfil their marriage duties

AMSTERDAM: A Dutch couple had their marriage annulled after the person officiating used a ChatGPT-generated speech that was intended to be playful but failed to meet legal requirements, according to a court ruling published this week.
The pair from the city of Zwolle, whose names were redacted from the January 5 decision under Dutch ⁠privacy rules, argued that they had intended to marry regardless of whether the right wording was used when they took their vows.
According to the decision, the person officiating their ceremony last April ⁠19 asked whether they would “continue supporting each other, teasing each other and embracing each other, even when life gets difficult.”
The pair said “I do” and the officiant declared them “not only husband and wife, but above all a team, a crazy couple, each other’s love and home base.”
But the judge ⁠found that they had not actually sworn to fulfil their marriage duties — something that is required under Dutch law.
“The court understands that the date in the marriage deed is important to the man and woman, but cannot ignore what the law says.” It ordered the marriage removed from the Zwolle city registry.