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The Bad Princes Of Arabia - Politics - Nairaland

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The Bad Princes Of Arabia by Nobody: 9:17am On Oct 29, 2015
If you ever wondered why Muslim terrorists are so batshit insane then you ought to research the use or rather abuse of psychotic mind altering drugs like Captagon which is basically amphetamine.

Now this is not the news but the actually news worthy event is of a Saudi Prince who was detained in Dubai airport attempting to smuggle in a whooping 2 tons of the drug alongside some cocaine.

Now why will a Saudi Prince need so much Meth?

I know the Saudi economy is going to sh-t with the low price of oil (which the Saudis have only themselves to blame for) but if you think the sweet prince is just getting his hustle up in order to maintain his rich lifestyle then you are a dead wrong.

This is just another link between the House of Saud and ISIS.

I can bet that those pills where heading straight to the Islamic State to be used by their lunatic fighters just as it has been widely documented that our own misguided daft bokos have been known to get high on meth.


[size=18pt]Saudi prince held in record Beirut airport drug bust[/size]
BEIRUT: A Saudi prince and four others were detained on Monday in Lebanon in the largest drug bust in the history of the Beirut airport, a security source said.

Saudi prince Abdel Mohsen Bin Walid Bin Abdulaziz and four others were detained by airport security while allegedly “attempting to smuggle about two tons of Captagon pills and some cocaine,” a security source told AFP.

“The smuggling operation is the largest one that has been foiled through the Beirut International Airport,” the source said on condition of anonymity.

Captagon is the brand name for the amphetamine phenethylline, a synthetic stimulant. The banned drug is consumed mainly in the Middle East and has reportedly been widely used by fighters in Syria.

http://tribune.com.pk/story/979381/saudi-prince-held-in-record-beirut-airport-drug-bust/
Re: The Bad Princes Of Arabia by Nobody: 9:20am On Oct 29, 2015
[size=18pt]Saudi prince arrested on sex crime charge is late King Abdullah’s son[/size]

Saudi Arabia’s large royal family has had past run-ins with authorities in various countries.

Late last month, a Saudi prince was arrested in Los Angeles for allegedly trying to force a woman to perform MouthAction on him at a Beverly Hills mansion.

But authorities decided not to pursue the charge, citing a lack of evidence. In 2013, a Saudi princess was accused in Los Angeles of enslaving a Kenyan woman as a housemaid, but the charges were also eventually dropped.
Re: The Bad Princes Of Arabia by Nobody: 9:25am On Oct 29, 2015
[size=18pt]Saudi prince 'forced male aide to FART in his face during coke-fuelled orgy'[/size]



A SAUDI prince has been accused of forcing a male aide to FART in his face during a coke-fuelled orgy with prostitutes.
Prince Majed bin Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud also ordered the entire staff at his $37million LA mansion to STRIP as he wanted to see "naked p****" – according to court papers.

The shocking incidents were allegedly part of a three-day party – which ended with his arrest after neighbours spotted a crying, bleeding woman trying to climb out of his compound.

Three female servants are suing the royal – one of the late Saudi King Abdullah's 35 children.



The women claim they were imprisoned at the sheikh's Beverly Hills pad during a debauched party – at which he allegedly snorted cocaine and cavorted with "multiple" prostitutes.

One claims he threatened to KILL her unless she "partied" with him and attempted to URINATE on the trio – before a retainer dragged him away.

Prince Majed is also accused of forcing the women to watch as an aide masturbated him.
Re: The Bad Princes Of Arabia by Nobody: 9:31am On Oct 29, 2015
[size=18pt]Sex, drugs and MURDER as playboy prince dies mysteriously aged 33[/size]

Sheikh Rashid bin Mohammed bin Rashid al Maktoum – eldest son of the billionaire ruler of Dubai – died on Saturday from a heart attack.

The shock death – at such a young age – has shone a light on the reclusive royal's murky past – and led to suggestions his coronary was caused by DRUGS.

The handsome Arab studied at Sandhurst military academy in England – like the Duke of Cambridge and Prince Harry – had a glittering career as a sportsman and as eldest son was destined to rule oil-rich Dubai.

But just a few years later he was passed over for the throne in favour of his younger brother – and had almost disappeared from public view.



After graduating from Sanhurst in 2002 Sheikh Rashid – a talented horseman and keen Man U fan – returned to head up a number of companies and charitable organisations in Dubai.

He set up investment companies and a racing stable – Zabeel Racing International – amassing a reported personal fortune of $1.9billion.

He was a founding member of Dubai Sports and Cultural Club and went on to sporting success himself – picking up two gold medals for horse events in the Asian Games.

But two years later – in 2008 – he was stripped of the title of crown prince in favour of his brother – Hamdan.

The reason for the change in succession was revealed in a confidential memo sent from the US consulate in Dubai back to Washington.

In the leaked diplomatic cable – published by Wikileaks – acting consul general David Williams wrote: "It is alleged that Rashid killed an assistant in the Ruler's office, thereby forfeiting his opportunity to be heir."


Rumours of Arab royals attending drug-fuelled orgies – including at posh London hotels – are widespread.

In another leaked cable Martin Quinn – US consul general in the Saudi city of Jeddah – writes: "Behind the facade of Wahabi conservatism in the streets the underground nightlife for Jeddah's elite youth is thriving and throbbing.

"The full range of worldly temptations and vices are available – alcohol, drugs, sex – but strictly behind closed doors.

"This freedom to indulge carnal pursuits is possible merely because the religious police keep their distance when parties include the presence or patronage of a Saudi royal and his circle of loyal attendants."

Sheikh Rashid's disappearance from public life has been put down to repeated spells in rehab – as well as the killing.

When the apparently health – and sporty – young man died of a heart attack died aged just 33, speculation about drug use is almost inevitable.
Re: The Bad Princes Of Arabia by ZKOSOSO(m): 9:33am On Oct 29, 2015
Satanic prince from a satanic kingdom with satanic character!
Everything Saudi is Evil. Satan owns that country am pretty sure!

Attempt to playfully stone him last month caused over 2000 deaths!!
He really lives there grin

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Re: The Bad Princes Of Arabia by fart: 9:34am On Oct 29, 2015
PappyMason:
[size=18pt]Saudi prince 'forced male aide to FART in his face during coke-fuelled orgy'[/size]



A SAUDI prince has been accused of forcing a male aide to FART in his face during a coke-fuelled orgy with prostitutes.
Prince Majed bin Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud also ordered the entire staff at his $37million LA mansion to STRIP as he wanted to see "naked p****" – according to court papers.

The shocking incidents were allegedly part of a three-day party – which ended with his arrest after neighbours spotted a crying, bleeding woman trying to climb out of his compound.

Three female servants are suing the royal – one of the late Saudi King Abdullah's 35 children.



The women claim they were imprisoned at the sheikh's Beverly Hills pad during a debauched party – at which he allegedly snorted cocaine and cavorted with "multiple" prostitutes.

One claims he threatened to KILL her unless she "partied" with him and attempted to URINATE on the trio – before a retainer dragged him away.

Prince Majed is also accused of forcing the women to watch as an aide masturbated him.

Serious
Re: The Bad Princes Of Arabia by Nobody: 9:38am On Oct 29, 2015
[size=18pt]Prince Nayef’s Cocaine Plane[/size]



In 2004, Prince Nayef bin Fawwaz Al Shalaan was indicted in the United States and France for his involvement in a drug-dealing operation between South America and Europe.

The scheme dates back to a love affair between the prince and a Colombian woman named Doris Mangeri at the University of Miami in the 1970s. They kept in touch and occasionally met over the years, with the prince even acting as a virtual surrogate father for her children. In 1998, the prince is alleged to have met with members of a Colombian drug syndicate introduced through Mangeri.

The syndicate was headed by Juan Gabriel Usuga and Carlos Ramon, former brothers-in-law who had both lost an eye in accidents and were making millions in the drug trade. They shared a ranch outside Medellin, Colombia, which they called the Cyclops Cattle Ranch.The prince allegedly proposed smuggling cocaine on his private Boeing 727 jet, then laundering money through a bank he owned, Kanz Bank, “the only Islamic private bank in Geneva.”

The prince has a history with drugs and was once indicted in Mississippi on narcotics charges in 1984. The Colombians agreed to his plan, and 2,000 kilograms (4,400 lb) of cocaine was smuggled into a stash house in Caracas via potato truck, then transferred into 100 empty Samsonite suitcases, and finally placed aboard the prince’s plane. Moved to a Paris stash house, some of the cocaine was then shipped off to Italy and Spain. Unluckily for the conspirators, the Paris stash house and a Spanish shipment were intercepted by authorities.

As they squabbled over blame, the Colombians found themselves arrested in the United States.Despite the Saudi kingdom’s draconian policies against drug trafficking, the prince claimed his meetings with the Colombians were merely a search for investors for a plastics venture and was found not guilty by their courts. As there are no extradition treaties between the kingdom and either France or the United States, there wasn’t much that investigators could do.

The Saudi interior minister, Prince Nayef bin Abdel Aziz, even threatened to cancel several French business deals if the narcotics investigation continued. Prince Nayef bin Fawwaz Al Shalaan remains in hiding.

In court, Usuga claimed that he asked the prince why he wanted to smuggle drugs, and the prince replied: “The world is already doomed. [I’ve been] authorized by God to sell drugs.”
Re: The Bad Princes Of Arabia by CharlyNick: 9:39am On Oct 29, 2015
Wow................. Interesting
Re: The Bad Princes Of Arabia by Nobody: 9:41am On Oct 29, 2015
[size=18pt]The Execution Of Princess Misha’al[/size]

This is one Romeo and Juliet story that ended just as badly as the original. Princess Misha’al bint Fahd al Saud was in an arranged marriage (by all accounts, an unhappy one) with an older cousin. She left for Beirut to pursue further studies. There, she met Khaled, the son of a Saudi diplomat, and began an affair. They maintained the affair back in the kingdom and finally attempted to flee the country together in 1977, but they were caught before they got very far.

The princess refused to simply denounce her lover and confessed to the adultery, enraging her conservative grandfather, Muhammad bin Abdul Aziz al Saud, brother of the king.She and her lover were taken to a parking lot in Jeddah, and 19-year-old Princess Misha’al was executed by a gunshot to the head while her lover watched. He would be dispatched by beheading, which was reportedly botched so badly that it took four strokes to complete.

The Saudi authorities attempted to keep the whole affair quiet, but it caused international outcry in 1980 when it became the subject of a docu-drama entitled Death Of A Princess, broadcast on the BBC and PBS. The Saudis responded by trying to suppress the film, and they failed. They retaliated by expelling the British ambassador to Riyadh, withdrawing 400 Saudi royals from Britain, and causing the UK £200 million in lost revenue from canceled orders and product boycotts.

The film was rebroadcast in 2005 and is available to view in full online.

And here it is my Plebs


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kDUsKJTkOaE
Re: The Bad Princes Of Arabia by Nobody: 9:45am On Oct 29, 2015
[size=18pt]Halloween At Faisal’s[/size]

Halloween is banned in the Saudi kingdom, as are most foreign holidays, for their “un-Islamic” nature. Every October, shopping malls are patrolled by religious police on the lookout for outlets selling costumes. But this prohibition doesn’t extend to the royal family. According to US diplomatic cables released through Wikileaks, there is a wild party scene in Jeddah under the protection of Saudi princes.

In 2009, Prince Faisal al Thunayan held an underground Halloween party at his residence, inviting over 150 young Saudi men and women. Prince Faisal is a Cadet prince, meaning that he is not in line for the throne but still enjoys all the protection and perks of being a member of the royal family. The religious police were kept at bay by khawi, young Nigerian bodyguards of a similar age who grow up with their princes and serve for life and are considered utterly loyal. Typical Ab0ki mumu.

Despite Saudi prohibitions on alcohol, Filipino bartenders served a cocktail punch made from sadiqi, a local moonshine. Top-shelf liquor bottles filled with sadiqi were on display. The event, co-sponsored by US energy drink company Kizz-me, featured dancing, costumes, and a DJ. The American consulate officials attending the event heard by word of mouth that many of the female guests were actually prostitutes hired for the event and also that cocaine and hashish use is common at these kind of parties. While only a few years ago, the only nightlife for rich Saudis in Jeddah was informal “dating” in private residences, today, many royal residences have basement bars, discos, entertainment centers, and clubs catering to a growing appetite among the young elite for Western-style nightlife options.
Re: The Bad Princes Of Arabia by Nobody: 9:47am On Oct 29, 2015
[size=18pt]The Death Of Bandar Abdulaziz[/size]

In 2010, Prince Saud bin Abdulaziz bin Nasir al Saud was arrested for beating his manservant and gay lover, Bandar Abdulaziz, to death in an expensive London hotel room. The death is said to have come after weeks of physical and sexual abuse at the hands of the prince. Finally, on Valentine’s Day, in a rage fueled by champagne and “sex on the beach” cocktails, Mr. Abdulaziz was beaten 37 times and bitten on both cheeks. He died as a result of his injuries.

After the attack, the prince ordered glasses of milk and water, dragged the corpse into the bed, and tried to clean up the blood in a failed attempt to cover up his crime. The prince spent most of his trial trying to prove he was not gay, as homosexuality is punishable by execution in Saudi Arabia. However, one expert on Saudi Arabia noted that most executions for homosexuality in the kingdom were linked to rape charges, and as a member of the royal family, the prince was unlikely to suffer capital punishment.


Others believe that the concealment was motivated more from a desire to obscure the sexual element in the crime. The prince and Abdulaziz seemed to have been in a committed but abusive relationship. They went shopping, dined, and stayed together in the best hotels, but the prince subjected his manservant and lover to frequent violent attacks. One such assault, caught on a parking lot CCTV camera, showed Mr. Abdulaziz submitting to a beating and then meekly following his master as he walked off.

The prince attempted to claim that the death was related to a supposed incident where Mr. Abdulaziz was beaten up and robbed of 3,000 euros several weeks earlier, but forensic evidence proved that the wounds were more recent. The prince was convicted and jailed for life but was sent back to Saudi Arabia in 2013 as part of a prisoner exchange deal to allow five Britons languishing in Saudi jails to serve their sentences at home.
Re: The Bad Princes Of Arabia by Nobody: 9:52am On Oct 29, 2015
[size=18pt]Prince Turki And Princess Hind[/size]

In 1973, Prince Turki bin Abdul Aziz married beautiful 20-year-old Hind al-Fassi (daughter of a Sufi mystic barred for religious reasons from entering the Saudi kingdom) over the objections of his family. He divorced his first wife in the process. For nine years, they traveled the world with Hind’s mother, sister, and brothers, Mohammed, Allal, Mustafa, and Tarek, as well as a large entourage. They lived a lavish and outlandish lifestyle and caused scandal and headlines wherever they went with their unrestrained spending and wild parties. They eventually settled down in a North Miami condominium, the Cricket Club, overlooking Biscayne Bay.

They went there at the urging of Alvin Malnik, a multimillionaire Jewish lawyer with mob connections whom they had met while staying in London. He had charmed Hind’s brothers with his dashing and adventurous image and quickly managed to take control of the prince’s finances. Various chaos involving the al-Fassi brothers ensued. Mohammed, jealous of Malnik’s power, went to Turkey and adopted a young boy and then dumped his Italian girlfriend to marry a Saudi girl, all apparently in a failed attempt to impress his brother-in-law. Seventeen-year-old Tarek kidnapped a young Saudi woman in a London discotheque, proposed to her, and made a cash offer to her husband to divorce her. Malnik’s son, Mark, fell in love with Hind’s sister. The move to the United States was intended for Malnik to finally sort everything out.

Miami had an effect on the al-Fassis, who discovered that it was the perfect city to host their lavish and rambunctious lifestyles, despite trouble with the neighbors and disastrous real-estate schemes. Trouble started to emerge in 1982, when newspaper articles alleged that servants on the prince’s compound were being forced to work 24/7 at punishingly low pay while being prevented from leaving or contacting the outside. A warrant was issued, and a dozen police officers arrived with an interpreter in tow. A shouting and shoving match ensued between the officers and Princess Hind and the bodyguards. During the fracas, the princess’s mother, in the bathroom, asked a police officer to pass her a towel through the door. When he did so, she bit him on the arm.

Lawsuits and counter-suits raged between the police and the prince, who eventually got off due to diplomatic immunity, hastily organized by the State Department and the Saudi ambassador. The family was ordered to return to the kingdom, but it wasn’t long before the prince and his entourage relocated again to Egypt, where they took over the top three floors of the Ramses Hilton. The Cairo press in the 1990s was filled with lurid stories of servant beatings and thuggish bodyguards. Two Egyptian waiters fell from the hotel while trying to escape down the side of the building with tied bedsheets. Hind became notorious for refusing to pay a local jeweler thousands of dollars that she owed and for entertaining male guests, including well-known Arab singers, while Prince Turki was passed out from prescription medications, prescribed to him by his domineering wife.
Re: The Bad Princes Of Arabia by Nobody: 4:04pm On Oct 29, 2015
themilanway
vicadex07
modath

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