Andy Cohen is (unsurprisingly) receiving a lot of flak following the premiere of a trailer for Bravo’s upcoming show, The Real Housewives of Dubai. The show—which is set to be the 11th in the Housewivesverse—has swiftly become a controversial topic, and now a group of 12 human rights organizations has banded together to condemn the series and Bravo.

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Andy Cohen Announced The New Series To Mixed Reviews

Cohen announced the spinoff back in November, telling The Hollywood Reporter: "Everything's bigger in Dubai, and I couldn't be more excited to launch Bravo's first international Housewives series in a city I've been fascinated by for years."

Even the show’s tagline promises an unapologetically brazen experience: "If you can't handle the heat ... get out of Dubai."

While Bravo diehards reacted positively to the new series, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that plenty of others took issue with Andy Cohen’s announcement. According to Radar, a dozen organizations were so appalled about the location of the series that they banded together and sent a statement to Bravo and executives at NBCUniversal and the Truly Original production company.

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12 Organizations Banded Together To Oppose The Series

"We are deeply concerned by your decision to produce and launch the latest edition of the Real Housewives series in Dubai," the statement read. "Dubai is an absolute monarchy that is part of the dictatorship of the United Arab Emirates (UAE). By setting the Real Housewives franchise inside Dubai, you are helping the UAE dictatorship hide its male rulers’ misogyny, legalized homophobia, and mass violence against women."

The groups demanded that executives "reveal whether the rulers of Dubai and the UAE funded or financed the Real Housewives of Dubai in any way."

The groups also asked that Bravo run a disclaimer before each episode saying that the network and other businesses “oppose the UAE and Dubai dictatorship's misogyny, homophobia, women's rights violations, and war in Yemen." Moreover, they requested that money be donated to human rights organizations that fight against human rights violations.

It's unclear if Bravo will cave to the demands by the show's June 1 premiere date.

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