Tori Towey has returned to Ireland from Dubai saying she "is glad to be back" after landing at Dublin Airport.
"I'm just so relieved. I can't believe it," she said after arriving at Terminal 2. The 28-year-old was detained in Dubai and charged after allegedly suffering brutal domestic violence there.
Ms Towey praised the Irish Embassy in the UAE as well as her family, politicians, media, and the support of the Irish people.
"I feel bad for people who don't have the support that we have. We're such a tight country and we have each other's backs. I can't believe how fast things got going."
She added: "I'm back now. I'm excited to get home and see my family."
Ms Towey said at one point she feared she wouldn't get home saying that the past few weeks had been challenging.
“It’s been tiring mentally, kind of been stuck in the country. Obviously when my mother came out to me it was a massive help.
“It was the unknown, just not knowing anything and not knowing what was going to happen. But I’m back now I’m excited to get home and see my family and just to rest.”
She said she did not know what was going to happen over the last few weeks.
"It's only kind of between yesterday and today that I got clarity, because I wasn’t getting any answers. I am very thankful to my beautiful family and friends, who kept me strong. I’m just going to go home and see my friends and sleep, and just sleep. Go home and rest”.
Her case has sparked international condemnation of the Dubai authorities.
Taoiseach Simon Harris first announced to the Dáil on Wednesday afternoon that the travel ban on Ms Towey’s passport had been lifted.
Ms Towey, originally from Boyle, Co Roscommon, moved to the UAE in April 2023 to begin work there as a flight attendant.
She married a man she met through work in March, and was hospitalised a short time later with extensive injuries after an alleged domestic violence incident.
Calling the treatment of the 28-year-old "utterly, utterly unacceptable", Mr Harris said that he was using "mild language" in describing the situation.
"Tori has been through, in my view, the most horrific situation," Mr Harris said outside Leinster House.
She "needs to be supported" and "brought back [..] to her home in Ireland,” he said. For Ms Towey to be facing criminal charges in Dubai for "attempted suicide" and alcohol consumption is unimaginable to most people, said Mr Harris.
"She is not a criminal," Mr Harris had told the Dáil. "She is a victim of gender-based violence."
Mary Lou McDonald, who first raised the case in the Dáil on Tuesday, echoed the Taoiseach's words.
"We are not objects. We are not chattel. We are not the possession of anybody and our human rights matter and our safety matters."
Ms Towey was “very relieved and anxious to get home,” Sinn Féin TD for Roscommon Claire Kerrane, who has been in regular contact with Ms Towey since the news of her predicament broke, told the
.She is also “overwhelmed by the support” she has received in trying to get home.
Ireland’s diplomatic efforts, engaging with the UAE on trying to broker peace in Gaza and on the wider Palestine issue helped smooth diplomatic channels to ensure that Ms Towey’s travel ban was lifted quickly and the charges against her were dropped, it is understood.
Her case has been described as complex legally by a source close to it.
The Irish Embassy in the UAE was instrumental in ensuring Ms Towey could be released and returned home.
Tánaiste and Minister for Foreign Affairs Micheál Martin said that work has been ongoing in relation to Ms Towey's case for some time.
Radha Stirling, chief executive at the human rights organisation Detained in Dubai, who has been helping the Toweys, praised the Irish government for the speed with which it responded to Ms Towey’s case.
“When a government gets behind their citizens, when they go the extra mile, they are successful in getting citizens home,” Ms Stirling told Newstalk.