Lindsay Lohan Safe in Dubai Amid Strikes

Lindsay Lohan Safe in Dubai Amid Strikes

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, her spouse Bader Shammas and their son Luai are safe amid ongoing Iranian strikes on , where they reside.

The Mean Girls star and businessman, both 39, and their son are OK in the wake of , where Lohan has resided for more than a decade, a source told TMZ Sunday. 

Lohan took to Instagram Stories Sunday . She wrote, 'Praying for peace. Stay safe everyone. God bless us all.'

Lohan and Shammas first crossed paths in 2020 prior to getting engaged in November of 2021. The couple exchanged vows in the summer of 2022 and welcomed their first-born son in July of 2023. 

The Daily Mail has reached out to reps for Lohan for further comment on the story. 

The Parent Trap alum spoke with Vogue Arabia last week about her romance with Shammas, saying they 'have a great balance' with one another personality-wise.

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Lindsay Lohan, her spouse Bader Shammas and their son Luai are safe amid ongoing Iranian strikes on Dubai, where they reside. Pictured in Dubai January 15

'We’re so good together because he’s so calm and I’m like a firecracker,' she said. 'Being in Dubai is very grounding.'

Lohan took to Instagram Stories Sunday, writing, 'Praying for peace. Stay safe everyone. God bless us all'

Lohan said last week of her life outside of the U.S.: 'Being in Dubai is very grounding'

Smoke rose from the port of Jebel Ali following a reported Iranian strike in Dubai Sunday

The country's Capital Market Authority said the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange and Dubai Financial Market would be closed Monday and Tuesday.

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It says it will closely monitor the regional situation and take any further steps as necessary.

Another market, the Nasdaq Dubai, also said it was halting trading both days.

Dubai is the Gulf's main business hub, though the Emirati capital Abu Dhabi is also an important regional financial center and home to some of the world's biggest sovereign wealth funds.

The benchmark index for the Saudi Exchange, the region's largest stock market, fell 2.2 percent on Sunday. 

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