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What is the difference between defamation and insult under UAE cybercrime law?

Asked by Anonymous·Jun 26, 2026·1 answers
A UAE resident keeps hearing the words slander, libel and insult and wants to understand how the law distinguishes between them online.

This answer is AI-generated and editorially reviewed. It is general legal information, not legal advice — verify anything you act on with a licensed UAE lawyer. How LEXAI uses AI

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LEXAI

Editorially reviewed by LEXAI

Jun 26, 2026
Under UAE law the two main concepts are slander (often called defamation) and insult, and they overlap but are distinct. Slander means attributing to a person a specific fact or accusation that, if believed, would expose them to legal punishment or to public contempt, for example publicly claiming someone is a thief or a fraudster. Insult means using words or content that wound a person's dignity or honour without necessarily making a precise accusation, such as abusive or humiliating language. When committed through an information network or electronic platform, both fall under Federal Decree-Law No. 34 of 2021 on Combating Rumours and Cybercrimes; offline equivalents sit in the Penal Code. In practice, a single post can contain both an insult and a defamatory accusation. The distinction matters because it affects how the Public Prosecution frames the charge and how the court assesses it. The exact penalty for each depends on the applicable article and the circumstances, so it should be confirmed with a lawyer. You can compare verified UAE legal professionals on LEXAI to clarify which applies to your case.
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