Washington – A Minnesota man jailed in the United Arab Emirates for posting a comedy video to YouTube will return home this week, less than a month after a judge sentenced him to a year in prison.
U.S. State Department officials confirmed Monday that authorities in the Persian Gulf nation expect to release Shezanne "Shez" Cassim from a high-security prison within days.
Cassim has been imprisoned since April, for airing a 19-minute mock documentary that spoofed would-be teenage gangsters in Dubai.
The Sri-Lankan born U.S. citizen from Woodbury, who moved to Dubai for work after graduating from the University of Minnesota in 2006, could return home as soon as Thursday.
"We understand that Mr. Cassim will be released in the next few days," State Department press officer Pooja Jhunjhunwala said. "We continue to work closely with the U.A.E. authorities to ensure his quick release."
American consular staffers plan to visit Cassim once more before he leaves the country, Jhunjhunwala said.
'A great relief'
Cassim's impending release will mark the final chapter in a nine-month ordeal that baffled international observers and left the 29-year-old in a desert prison for months with little legal recourse.
It started when Cassim, along with several friends, shot and uploaded a comic video titled "Ultimate Combat System: Deadly Satwa G's" in October 2012.