For successful London jeweller Nadeem Osman, Dubai had all the bling in the world. Like thousands of others, he loved the city's fast life, with its sports cars, glitzy shopping malls and super-luxury hotels. And, of course, its sun and fabulous beaches.
The 37-year-old businessman from Balham, South London, holidayed there at least twice a year with his wife and even thought of moving there eventually, away from the rain and cold of England.
So 14 months ago, as an investment on the side, Mr Osman decided to buy four apartments in the city, which he planned to rent and also use as his holiday homes.
Losing its sparkle: Jeweller Nadeem Osman bought four flats in Dubai last year, just before the property market there crashed
Losing its sparkle: Jeweller Nadeem Osman bought four flats in Dubai last year, just before the property market there crashed
He paid £580,000 for two off-plan apartments in Villa Caria, a residential block in Jumeirah South, and two more in a proposed hotel on the Dubai Waterfront, known as Hotel K. But his timing could not have been worse, with the Dubai property market then going into free fall: down 32 per cent in the first quarter of this year and 47 per cent in the second, according to Knight Frank.
Assetz, a property investment company, estimates that the fall may reach 70 per cent this year. Mr Osman bought the apartments through Dynasty Zarooni (DZ) - one of the city's biggest real estate companies, with a portfolio of properties worth £219million.
He paid the full sum upfront, assured that the money would be put into an escrow account which protects a buyer's money until the work is complete.
In January, one of the directors of DZ was arrested on a £60million fraud allegation - and since released without charge - but work on Hotel K has not even started. It is scheduled to finish by 2011. The company does not even own the land on which it was to be built.
Villa Caria was supposed to be completed by the end of this year, but DZ has told him it may take a further two years. Mr Osman has also been told that his money was not put into an escrow account, and he is unable to get any back.
'I don't know what to do,' he said. 'If it was in this country I could do something about it, but in Dubai it's so difficult as there is a huge backlog in the courts.' Dynasty Zarooni has declined to comment after repeated attempts to contact it. Mr Osman has now formed a group with ten other investors to decide whether to take legal action or file a criminal case.
Dubai's courts are struggling with a mountain of property cases totalling £3billion - as much as £500million may involve British investors.
Stuart Law, of Assetz, says Britons, who were the largest Western investors, were partly responsible for the crash as they inflated prices through their highly geared buy-to-let schemes.
'We've known of properties that were sold again and again about ten times one after another - it was good as each person made a profit, but the person who was left with the contract at the last was in trouble,' said Mr Law.