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  • 3 years ago
31 - قصة بوحبيل أخطر تاجر مخدرات بدول الخليج !! سوالف طريق


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نحن دائماً نتطلع لدعمكم وتشجيعكم، إنضموا لمجتمع 'سوالف طريق' لتكونوا جزءًا من رحلتنا المثيرة في استكشاف القصص الواقعية حول الجريمة

وعمليات التحقيق والتحريات.
https://ko-fi.com/sawaliftariq

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😹
Fun
Transcript
00:00Hello
00:00God willing, today I will talk to you about a topic
00:04Pablos Kubar
00:06This Gulf region has a distinct character.
00:08merchant
00:09drugs
00:10Very popular in Kuwait
00:13It is said to Abu Habil
00:16This is Abu Habil
00:18Everyone will now enter
00:19I know about it on Google, and it will come to you.
00:22But I'm telling you
00:23Those who can't find us on Google
00:26Very few
00:27The one who told his story
00:29I'm going to tell you his story from the beginning.
00:32this
00:34Bu Habil
00:35The one I saw was Paplos Kubar
00:37I later found out he wasn't Mexican
00:40Colombian, the important thing is that we have nothing to do with it.
00:42This topic has a connection
00:43We know his story.
00:45Genie and sitting
00:47He tore the earth and sat down
00:49The detectives went crazy
00:50Why did I name him?
00:52Pablos Kubar
00:54I'll tell you why
00:57This boy
00:59From the beginning of the nineties
01:02By ninety-one, two, ninety-three
01:04Up to ninety-seven, the detectives went crazy
01:07They have information that we have, but they are unable to reach him.
01:12It means they can reach him as a person.
01:14But by crime
01:16No one can find any evidence against him.
01:19He didn't receive anything from him, but this was
01:21Biggest drug dealer
01:23Not just in Kuwait, but in the Gulf
01:26But it was because he was Kuwaiti and I liked him, but he launched his business from Kuwait.
01:33The Gulf states had the right to know, and it drove them crazy. We had information inside and outside Kuwait about operations.
01:40He has drug sales operations and is involved in drug trafficking, but they haven't been able to catch him in the act.
01:48What's the story behind this?
01:50They spent seven years monitoring him and trying everything they could to raid him.
01:59They couldn't find anything with him.
02:01reaped
02:02This person was so cautious that he employed a large group of people to protect him.
02:15It means people are watching his area, people are watching his house, people are watching him, they see any strange movements and inform him so he can escape.
02:24Or he's afraid of the things he has with him and the drugs.
02:27Ibtal Shofih means the word
02:30She was part of a team of the strongest and best detectives in Kuwait.
02:37They were all gathered together and formed a band just for this Abu Habil.
02:41Try once, twice, three times
02:48But as often as they control it
02:51This person started to get to know them one by one; he knew so-and-so, and so-and-so.
02:57The boy is very cautious and very intelligent, but his intelligence is not in the right way, of course.
03:04We don't extend it, so they're just spitting on it, literally.
03:11They didn't know what to do with him, so they had their manager; he was the oldest manager.
03:18A Kuwaiti detective with exceptional intelligence
03:23It means because he experienced it firsthand and saw it with his own eyes and tried it.
03:30He has extensive experience and can handle even the biggest and most dangerous criminals without any problem.
03:35He told them, "That's it, I've had enough of this criminal. I've reached my limit."
03:41I'm holding this, holding it by any means necessary, and I'm caught red-handed.
03:45They asked him, "How are you, may your life be long?" He replied, "What? Leave this matter to me."
03:50How did the days go by? He wore Afghan clothes. Do you know what Afghan clothes are?
03:59He disguised himself as a car washer. I'm sure only those who know this story are familiar with it.
04:08The old-fashioned men can only mention the new ones, I don't think they're even worth mentioning.
04:14Salf oh means oh, maybe they heard it in it, this mujir disguised himself in clothing
04:21An Afghan car washer went out one day at dawn to the beat of musk drums
04:27The car washer who always washes the Crown's car, the drug dealer Abu Habil, was arrested.
04:35Of course, they set it aside and said, "No, no, don't go near this street, and don't get close."
04:44He pointed at Abu Habil's car. "Why, Dad? I'm a detective. Oh, Grandpa, understand?"
04:50The situation was delayed, and they took from him, of course, the keys to Abu Habil's car.
04:56And this manager, who was disguised as a washerman, took it and started washing at dawn.
05:02Imagine Abu Habil's car! A police chief disguised as a car washer.
05:10He washed a criminal's car, and that's exactly what happened; I know the story.
05:16This might happen in movies, but this is reality.
05:21This is what happened; many veteran detectives remember the story.
05:25If this was popular back then, the important thing was washing the car the first day, the second day
05:32She happened to meet a drug dealer who asked her, "Who are you?" She replied, "I'm a washerman."
05:40He pretended to be Asian, specifically Afghan, and said, "I'm a washerman." Then he asked, "How am I a washerman?"
05:46Where's the car washer? He told him he'd traveled, and he replied, "So let me wash the car?"
05:52And how are you, Dad? Don't you want me to wash you with a rope? Because he's very careful, even
05:59The laundryman came to him and asked what he did. At first, he was suspicious, so he wanted to test him.
06:07This laundryman, who is our friend, the head of investigations, how did he tell him he had finished washing?
06:16The car, but before telling him to wash the car with a rope, he deliberately made sure to
06:23Small pieces of drugs, like hashish and such, nothing significant, even if it was
06:31Caught in this situation is considered a form of abuse because it's a very small quantity, so let it go.
06:38Inside the car, he wanted to see what this washerman's story was. Should he report him, or was it possible that a source from the Criminal Investigation Department, who didn't know the story, said, "Let's test him"?
06:52He actually left these small pieces of drugs in the car and told him to wash the car and left.
07:00Then when he returned, he didn't find the washerman tied up in the car, but he found the drugs that he had tied up with a rope.
07:09It's the crown jewel of drugs, just as it was before, nothing has changed, but wait a day or two, I'm suspicious about the matter.
07:16The next day he left money in the same way, but this detective was very clever; he knew that this was Abu Habil.
07:27He's smart and might be testing him or setting a trap for him, so act like you didn't see anything. Wash the car as best you can, better than...
07:39The street car washers, just to get their act together, wash the car every day and leave. They find a stray piece of hashish, money, and papers. They want to see if the papers have been moved. The head of the investigations department is very clever; he didn't touch anything. Why? Because this isn't worth arresting. He knows he'll get away with it since the amounts are small enough that he can release [someone/something].
08:09It turns out that drug use might be involved, and you know what I mean. So he was waiting for Abu Habil to quit drugs, or for the money to reveal the buying and selling of drugs, but in large quantities, or to reveal the source from which he imported the drugs. He continued in this manner. This was the head of investigations for three months. Imagine being the head of investigations and going to wash their car every day at dawn.
08:38Because Best was fixing it, this case had become a matter of life or death for him. It was either him or Abu Habil, that was the end of it. He had driven them all crazy, the officers all crazy, no one had a say in it. The head of investigations said, "That's it, I'll show you this month."
08:59Indeed, after three months, every day, the head of investigations, Shawn, goes and comes, you know, on a bicycle. We don't call him a "Qari" (a term of endearment), you call him a "Qari."
09:11The reader is the Afghan man who took it from him, the one who is this old balloon that he remembers.
09:17And he went and swept this bag and this load and this laundry, and the problem was, what was the head of investigations afraid of? That Abu Habil was watching him?
09:29So, folks, he was forced to move from one area to another far away in the village, fearing that Abu Habil was watching him or suspected something was amiss.
09:40This poor detective suffered for three months, and indeed he managed to recover the largest quantity of drugs that was in the car trunk that day.
09:55He was originally planning to take her home from night until dawn, but then something happened to him. He left her in the car.
10:05The head of investigations was waiting since dawn, sitting by the car door, saying, "My dad wants to wash the car."
10:12He saw the quantity and informed the squad, who arrested him red-handed with the drugs.
10:19This was in the year 97
10:21beautiful
10:23After he devised it and the plan succeeded, this manager became famous for his willpower and intelligence, and so on.
10:33Thank God, everyone is happy, we're finally rid of the biggest drug kingpin who was destroying the world.
10:39Not only was Kuwait destroyed, but the Gulf was also destroyed; it was supplied to the beloved.
10:42Of course, where did he get it from? He got it from Iran.
10:45Through the use of "tarat" (meaning strange and wonderful films), he used "tarat".
10:51You know, the kind of things you don't call things, are called "tarat".
10:54The same small boats, but they put engines on them and tell you, "This boat used to fly, fly!"
11:03What's above it means walking on the sea
11:06He could fly over the sea, so powerful was he that he was a target for hunting, with no coast guard or marine rescue.
11:13And what's wrong with him? He imports machinery from abroad, meaning he used to do things and own millions.
11:22He only spends it on, I mean, on improving his drug marketing.
11:30He owns machinery, cars, armored vehicles, and boats; he has a farm and a chalet.
11:40The boy was like a movie, like Pablo Copar, but this one was a murderer, no, this one was involved in drugs.
11:47Anyway, after he was arrested and sentenced to prison, approximately fourteen or seventeen years, I swear I'm not
12:02I don't remember, but what happened over fifteen years? This guy is a fool, it's impossible he'd stay silent.
12:15He was sentenced and imprisoned, that's it, he went to the central prison and that's the end of it, and he's under heavy guard, as well as
12:23The story, the movie, hasn't started yet. Now the movie that tells you, "Hey, listen to the story," will begin.
12:31He's sitting in prison, plotting how to escape. I mean, a character like that is intelligent, powerful, wealthy, and influential.
12:43No way he'd stay silent. He had to find a way to escape from prison. And he actually managed to find a way, a very, very, very clever way.
12:55But no one ever expected him to pull off such a move and actually escape. No, he didn't escape alone, actually. He escaped around 2003. He didn't escape alone, the shocker was that he escaped with six Iranian drug dealers all at once.
13:19You might say, "How is that strange and wonderful?" I tell you, it truly is something strange and wonderful.
13:26And what's even stranger is that after he escaped, he reached Iran. How did he get there? How did he get to Iran? People went crazy. The security leaders went crazy. How did he even get there?
13:44It was a normal arrangement: he would leave here, get into such-and-such car that would take him to the sea, then take such-and-such boat that would take him to such-and-such ship that would take him to Iran. He went straight to Iran.
13:59They received information that he had arrived in Peran. Investigations began into how he escaped. This was a very serious case. Of course, the Ministry of Interior had placed all personnel, officers, and leaders under house arrest.
14:20Those in the central prison or who have a connection to the central prison
14:24Those who left, how did they escape?
14:28Taboon the disaster, Sean
14:30He ran away
14:32In coordination and cooperation with the prison director
14:39The main suspect in the smuggling operation is the prison director, he said.
14:44This is the disaster that happened
14:46How did they check the account?
14:49All the officers, detectives, personnel, and so on, found nothing.
14:55But when they finally checked, it was something unlikely.
14:59The prison director himself had 600,000 Kuwaiti dinars deposited into his account.
15:05That means one million four hundred thousand dollars
15:09How? Where did you get that information? They pressured him.
15:13Shan admits
15:14The lover or the one who brought him out
15:17He parked his car with the accused and got out the door
15:21It's as if there's nothing in cooperation with him and the junior policeman.
15:25The prison director took a thousand and the beloved one took half a million.
15:30A man with a radiant face, with a rope, went with honor and respect, mounted a camel, and said, "Peace be upon you," and then went to Iran.
15:40Of course, this prison director and the policeman who collaborated with him in smuggling the prisoners will be put on trial immediately.
15:52They were imprisoned, dismissed from their jobs, and jailed for more than five years.
15:58With work and debauchery, of course.
16:01Instead of searching again for Abu Habil
16:06They're going around in circles, international dealings, Interpol, trying to figure out how he entered Iran.
16:15Of course, you Iranians know how it's normal for them to enter; it's clear.
16:20But two years later they were shocked to find out there was very strong information
16:28Abu Habil is still involved in drug trafficking in the Gulf countries.
16:35How did my beloved appear, and where is he?
16:38Located in our sister country, the UAE
16:41They did what they did, and so on.
16:46They discovered that he had arrived in the UAE using a forged passport.
16:52But you think they went and captured
16:56No one was able to catch him
16:58How did they catch them?
16:59They arrested him after he smuggled very large quantities of drugs.
17:04Who brought them into the UAE from Iran?
17:09And the UAE entered it
17:11This was one of his drug smuggling operations.
17:15He was arrested in connection with this case.
17:18He was sentenced to ten years in prison.
17:21After serving a ten-year prison sentence in the UAE
17:28It was delivered at the request of Kuwait.
17:31Because he is wanted by Interpol
17:33They handed him over to Kuwait
17:36So that he can start over
17:41In carrying out the prison sentence
17:43the first
17:44Which is five years
17:46In addition to ten years
17:48Just for the escape case
17:51How many are they now?
17:52Twenty-five years, it starts all over again
17:54This was approximately 2000
17:572017
18:02almost
18:032017
18:04That means three years ago
18:06I think they handed him over to Kuwait.
18:08His prison sentence began
18:10But what this time?
18:11This time, no one will pass by.
18:14This is a type
18:15Dangerous and very clever
18:18He was placed under unusual guard.
18:21And these are its forms, of course.
18:23May God rid us of them
18:25And among their troubles
18:26This is the end of our story about
18:29Pablo Escobar of the Gulf
18:31Abu Habil Al-Kuwaiti
18:32This is the end of our story for today.
18:35God willing, it will be a disaster.
18:37The story will be
18:38Stronger and stronger
18:39hopefully
18:40Don't forget
18:42Subscribe to the channel
18:44And give us a like
18:45If you liked it
18:46This video
18:48And may God give you a thousand
18:50Take care, and please excuse me for the long message.
18:51Peace
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