British socialite and Real Housewives star Caroline Stanbury has returned to Dubai, insisting 'there's no place like home'.
Caroline, 49, and her toyboy husband Sergio Carrallo, 31, have been in the US since early February, having left their Dubai home so Caroline could film the latest series of the US version of The Traitors.
The couple were unable to return to Dubai after Iranian retaliatory missile strikes shut down commercial airspace across the Gulf, leaving Caroline's 16-year-old twin sons Zack and Aaron at home in the city with their father, her ex-husband, investment banker Cem Habib.
But over the weekend Caroline and Sergio posted that they were flying home, sharing a video of their 'calm' flight to their 'absolutely perfect and normal' home city.
The couple's video was captioned 'There is no place like home' and showed Caroline sipping champagne during her business class flight as she gushed about being reunited with her sons.
After touching down in Dubai, Caroline said that she had a brief moment of 'panic' on the flight, but quickly stated 'everything is kind of in your head, we did panic the last five minutes and everyone else was so calm.
British socialite and Real Housewives star Caroline Stanbury has returned to Dubai with her toyboy husband Sergio Carrallo, insisting 'there's no place like home'
Caroline, 49, and Sergio, 31, have been in the US since early February, having left their Dubai home so Caroline could film the latest series of The Traitors
'It feels so good,' she added. 'I was going crazy, home is home.' As drivers and airport aides loaded their huge pile of luggage into their car, Caroline gushed about her return to day-to-day luxury, telling the camera: 'It's so nice to land and be looked after. I definitely know why I live in Dubai.'
Driving home, Sergio continued: 'Look at how normal everything looks, full of people everywhere on the roads. Life is absolutely normal here.'
'I'm so happy,' Caroline told him. 'The biggest concern right now is that I'm in a group chat of whether it's going to rain tonight, that's all that's on my community group chat...Literally nothing else, life in Dubai is absolutely perfect.'
The video ended with the couple relaxing in their pajamas in their plush Dubai home, where they were reunited with their beloved dogs.
In comments made earlier this month whilst she was stranded in LA Caroline said the war engulfing the Middle East is 'not all bad' - because it will help 'correct' the 'ugly' influx of expats into her adopted home city.
The US and Israel launched joint airstrikes on Iran last month, triggering a wave of retaliatory drone and missile strikes across the region.
Dubai, which is packed with influencers and content creators from the UK, was hit repeatedly, with debris from an intercepted missile setting fire to a luxury hotel on the famous Palm Jumeirah, and a drone later striking the US consulate in the city.
Speaking on her podcast, Uncut and Uncensored, she described the situation in Dubai as 'crazy' and said the constant missile alerts were 'not good for your nervous system' - but insisted the conflict had a silver lining.
'I feel like I'm going home to maybe a different Middle East... maybe things will slow down a bit, but I actually don't think that's bad,' she said.
'I think there needed to be a little bit of a correction because everybody was coming. And when that happens, you get the good, the bad, and the ugly.
'I think some of the ugly needed to go and I'm not unhappy about that. Not to mention the traffic.'
Caroline, who was born in London and educated at the prestigious Westonbirt boarding school in Gloucestershire before attending King's College London, has called Dubai home for nearly 12 years.
She moved there after her then-husband, Cem, received a job offer in the region. The couple divorced in 2019 after 15 years of marriage, and in 2021 she married Spanish former footballer Sergio Carrallo, who is 19 years her junior.
She added: 'I know that people are second-guessing choices, like, will I feel okay to go back to the Middle East? I love America. I work here. It's given me so many good opportunities and memories and things like that, but I don't consider it safer than living where I live, the Middle East. In fact, I would say the Middle East where I am is still safer than America today.
'There has been no real damage in Dubai but it can't be much fun sleeping all night and getting these alarms that go off on the phone to let you know that there's been another missile attack. That's not good for your nervous system.'
The couple were unable to return to Dubai after Iranian retaliatory missile strikes shut down commercial airspace across the Gulf
Over the weekend Caroline and Sergio posted that they were flying home, sharing a video of their 'calm' flight and their arrival at their Dubai mansion
The video ended with the couple relaxing in their pajamas in their plush Dubai home, where they were reunited with their beloved dogs
Caroline, who was an original cast member on Bravo's Ladies of London from 2014 to 2017 before joining the inaugural cast of The Real Housewives of Dubai in 2022, continued: 'I'm very, very attached to the city. So no, I won't be moving even after this.
'My home is there. My children are there. My life is there. I love it. I really love waking up in the sun. I love the way it makes me feel. I love the opportunity that gives me to be my best self.'
She hit back at suggestions she is paid by the Emirati government to promote the country, insisting: 'I keep hearing these things like the government pay me... the government doesn't pay me anything.
'I don't even know if the government particularly knows I exist at this point. I'm definitely not paid to say all this. It is just the actual truth.'
Before quitting the UK, Caroline was a fixture of London's upper-class social scene. She is the daughter of venture capitalist Anthony Stanbury and his wife Elizabeth, who is connected to the Vestey dynasty, one of Britain's wealthiest families.
She added: 'Working in London and getting to where I was, there was always this feeling of like, she was handed it, she didn't work for it, she's lucky. And that just doesn't exist in the Middle East.
Caroline posted that she had returned to her luxurious day to day life, treating herself to a massage before bed
'I proved [that] to everyone because when I got to the Middle East, I didn't know anyone. So no one's given me a hand up.
'No one's making it easy for me and no one's handing me anything. And it was at the end of my court case and the end of my marriage. So I didn't have real money left.
'I started from nothing, essentially, in the Middle East. And I'm more successful today than I ever have been.'
Dubai's tax-free status, she added, had been a key part of her success. 'It gave me energy because I didn't have to give half of my money away to tax,' she admitted. 'I didn't have to worry about these things. So I had excess money to start businesses.'
Caroline added that the timing of the conflict in Iran has been a personal blow: 'It's my 50th in April. That kind of got kaput too because I had planned the biggest party and it was a really big deal for me to do my 50th, for so many reasons.
'One, because 50 is a milestone and I feel great. I had all the people I cared about coming. I had amazing singers, I had the perfect venue, I had caviar in balls. It was just going to be amazing.
'I'm now going to have to move it till September, I think... I had about 190 people due to come. I really wanted to celebrate with everyone - my family, my friends - and also my achievements.

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