She Found a Saudi Prince’s Secret Room… A Day Later, Her Fate Took a Dark Turn
The Maid Who Toppled a Prince: Inside the Secret Torture Room of Riyadh and the Housekeeper Who Died to Expose It

The glittering skyline of Riyadh, with its ultra-modern architecture and vast wealth, often hides the silent lives of the thousands of migrant workers who keep the city running. Among them was Siti, a 26-year-old woman from a small village in Central Java, Indonesia. Like many before her, she arrived in Saudi Arabia in May 2023 with a singular, noble goal: to lift her family out of poverty. Her parents, lifelong rice farmers, were aging, and her younger sister dreamed of becoming a teacher. A salary of $800 a month—a fortune in her village—seemed like the answer to every prayer. But within months, Siti would find herself at the center of a horrific international scandal, uncovering a chamber of horrors that would eventually cost her her life.
Siti was employed at the palace of Prince Faisal, a prominent nephew of the King. The residence was a marvel of modern European design, a sprawling villa of 40 rooms shielded by high white fences. For the first few months, life followed a strict, sterile routine managed by the head butler, Ibrahim. Siti’s days were filled with polishing marble and dusting gold-trimmed furniture. She sent $600 home every month, watching through video calls as the foundation of her family’s new brick house was laid. She was happy, or at least content, until the day she was introduced to the “Forbidden Door.”
During a staff briefing, Ibrahim pointed to a heavy steel door at the end of a service corridor. His instructions were absolute: the basement was off-limits. Any attempt to approach it would result in immediate deportation. For most, the threat was enough. But Siti began to notice patterns that didn’t fit the image of a prestigious royal. She observed the Prince entering the service corridor in the dead of night, returning hours later with feverish eyes and blood-chilling composure, only to burn his leather gloves in the main fireplace.
The turning point came one October night when a muffled, desperate scream drifted through the ventilation shaft above Siti’s bed. It was a woman’s voice, thick with agony, begging in a language Siti didn’t understand before being abruptly silenced. When she confided in a fellow maid, Rosa, she was met with a terrifying warning: the woman who held Siti’s job before her, Annie, had also asked questions before “disappearing.”

Driven by a mix of terror and a moral compass that refused to waver, Siti took a monumental risk. Finding a key in the Prince’s jacket pocket, she had a duplicate made at a locksmith in the old city. She waited for a night when the Prince was at an embassy reception and descended into the darkness. What she found was a professional torture chamber: soundproofed walls, chains hanging from the ceiling, and a metal cage. On a shelf lay the most damning evidence of all—seven passports of missing domestic workers and a “torture diary” where the Prince recorded his “experiments” with clinical detachment.
Siti knew she couldn’t go to the local police; the Prince’s influence was absolute. Instead, she used the palace Wi-Fi to send 50 photos of the chamber, the passports, and the diary to her childhood friend, Farah, in Jakarta. Her instructions were clear: if she didn’t check in within 48 hours, Farah was to release everything to the world.
The Prince, perhaps sensing a change in the atmosphere or alerted by hidden surveillance, acted quickly. In a chilling departure from routine, he asked Siti to serve him tea—a task usually reserved for another maid. Shortly after drinking from the same pot, Siti was gripped by agonizing convulsions. Ibrahim blocked the other servants from calling an ambulance, claiming the Prince’s private doctor was on the way. By the time help arrived, Siti was dead. The official cause was recorded as “acute heart failure.”
But the Prince had underestimated the power of the digital age and the loyalty of a friend. When 50 hours passed without a word, Farah opened the encrypted file. The images of the torture room and the faces of the missing women flooded social media under the hashtag #JusticeForSiti. Within 12 hours, the post had 8 million views. The Indonesian government, facing a wave of public fury, demanded an immediate investigation.

Under unprecedented international pressure, the Saudi King ordered a search of the palace. Though the Prince had cleared the basement of the diaries and passports, sniffer dogs found the remains of four women buried beneath the rose bushes in the garden. The DNA confirmed they were the women from the passports Siti had photographed.
The trial that followed was a landmark event. For the first time in modern history, a member of the royal family was held accountable for the systematic abuse and murder of “invisible” workers. In mid-2024, Prince Faisal was sentenced to 30 years in prison—the harshest sentence the Sharia court could provide for a royal.

Siti’s family received $2 million in compensation, a sum that built their home and funded her sister’s education but could never fill the void left by her absence. “She wanted us to live better,” her father told reporters, “but not at this price.” Today, the palace where Siti lost her life has been demolished, replaced by a public park. Her legacy lives on through the Siti Foundation, an organization founded by Farah to protect migrant workers. Siti’s story remains a haunting reminder that even behind the highest walls, the truth has a way of coming to light, carried by those brave enough to look into the darkness.
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