Gay Crown Prince of Dubai- Sex, Drugs and the Crown Family

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The source on this posting found on 

The Muslim Issue.wordpress

.com(http://themuslimissue.wordpress.com)






Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid al Maktoum (حمدان بن محمد بن راشد آل مكتوم) (born 14 November 1982), is the Crown Prince of Dubai, and second eldest son of HH Emir Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum and Sheikha Hind bint Maktoum bin Juma Al Maktoum. He is popularly known as Fazza, the name under which he publishes his poetry.
On 1 February 2008, Sheikh Hamdan was named as the Hereditary Prince of Dubai.  He was also appointed as the Chairman of the Dubai Executive Council in September 2006. However, as of late his public appearances are reduced and we rarely find any new pictures of him, only older ones republished again and again. His website only shows two short reports about tiny handful appearances within the past three years. In the past, he was a constant and almost daily subject in the media and his pictures were blasted with tiring repetition all across the Middle East Media, his every move followed, filmed, and photographed. His marital status remains unknown to the public but he is said to have dated (purchased?) British resident Verns Buckley-Chiongbian.
When the first diplomatic Wikileaks cables were published it came to surface that the Crown Prince of Dubai Sheikh “Fazza” Hamdan is actually a notorious drug and sex addict, and fly in male and female prostitutes in private planes to Dubai for weekend group sex parties. It even took us by surprise, who are well aware of the debased behavior of the Arabs.
Is the Prince finally cured off his gay sex, orgies, and drug addiction?
During his many documented and media covered travels and ventures Sheikh Hamdan has shown to have a daredevil personality with a strong passion for sports and risky stunts. It’s not unusual for people with this personality for dangers and challenges to be prone to addiction. Behind closed doors, Sheikh Hamdan and his brother have been addicted to hard drugs and incessant and perverted sex orgies (with both men and women).
Fazza was appointed as the royal representative and board member of his father’s company but got momentarily replaced by his less popular and lesser attractive brother (while Fazza was in rehab?). According to the early WikiLeaks documents the young Hamdan’s addiction got so bad, he was taken to several secret drug rehabs around Europe but they failed to cure him.
Too bad Muslims hate the Jews so much because some of the most effective drug rehab programs in the world is found with doctors in Jerusalem. Reports have shown that Muslim nations have the highest drug addiction problem in the entire world. All intoxicants, including alcohol, are forbidden in Islam, yet “immense volumes” of illegal amphetamines are being seized in the Middle East, particularly Saudi Arabia, according to Matthew Nice, a drugs expert with the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).
The World Drug Report 2010, published by the UNODC, shows Saudi authorities confiscated 12.8 metric tons of amphetamine in 2008. A total of 24.3 metric tons of amphetamine were seized worldwide that year, with 15.3 metric tons seized in the wider Middle East.
“I can’t emphasize enough the size of this,” said Nice, whose specialist area is amphetamine-type-stimulants. “Fifteen metric tons [of drugs] is absolutely huge, it’s absolutely phenomenal.
Professor Jallal Toufiq, founder of the Middle East and North Africa Harm Reduction Association told CNN: “There is a worsening of the drug situation in the whole region, with no exceptions.
“We can show it in terms of treatment demand, social expression, related crime, HIV and Hepatitis C increasing in these countries — all these kinds of indirect indicators.”
But he added that a lack of research and data collection on the ground make it hard to identify the scale of the problem.
“In the Middle East and North Africa region there’s a huge void in terms of data and information,” he said. “For many countries, there’s a lack of political will because people just don’t want to deal with this.”
The Arab royal family, who consist of several thousand family members (!), have many who are deeply addicted to drugs and orgies. Often they travel to destinations around the world to conduct shameless sex, drug and alcohol-fueled orgies in our hotel rooms – far away from the eyes and ears of servants or people who may get access to the information.
Is there anywhere in the world these Muslims have a good reputation? Not only are the Arab royalty drug, sex and alcohol dependent but they are very violent and nasty drunks, junkies and murderers. The ideology of Mohammed come to the surface in the most violent and unpleasant manner, especially when they are drunk or on drugs.
UPDATE JULY 2013: The royal family has begun to increase Fazza’s public appearances since we published this article in 2012. Prior to that he only had 3-4 appearances updated on his site in nearly three years. And the media and an official website would only publish old pictures of Fazza from his pre-addiction days. So what do you think? Did his many stints in rehab finally work and he is back in the game, or?
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More about Arab Conduct:
1. Wikileaks discussion on Arabian TV: Wikileaks Expose All Arab Kings And Rulers Without Exception 2013
2. WikiLeaks cables: Saudi princes throw parties boasting drink, drugs and sex
3. Arab prince and relative to Bahrain’s King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa threatened with 50,000-volt Taser gun on British Airways flight for being drunk
4. Saudi Sheik Issa is cleared of torturing civilian in UAE courts
5. Saudi Arabians Torture Employees ‘Hammer Nails’ Into Sri Lankan Housemaid
6. Member of Saudi royal family entourage, 60, ‘raped barmaid in his room at New York’s Plaza Hotel’
7. (Arabic) الأمير طلال:قضية إغتصاب Saudi Prince Rape Case
8. French mother in custody battle with Saudi prince falls to her death
9. Saudi prince Prince Saud Bin Abdulaziz Bin Nasir al Saud who killed gay sex-slave and manservant ‘to be allowed home’
10. Saudi Arabia’s Princess Sara claims asylum in the UK 
11. Saudi princess’s lover charged with knife attack (lover appear to be a Thai-mix immigrant to Sweden)
12. Saudi Arabian princess seeks asylum in Britain over an illegitimate child
13. 15-year-old Saudi girl flees from 90-year-old husband
The official clean image of Dubai’s Crown Prince Sheikh Hamdan “Fazza” Bin Mohammed Bin Rashid Al-Makthoum. Hamdan’s secret drug and gay addiction came as a surprise from diplomatic ties via unclassified documents, later made public by WikiLeaks cable reports, not meant for the public domain. This report disappeared from the web after merely a few weeks and cannot be found anywhere anymore, demonstrating that Arabs have used their money and influence to remove media content. Other reports on Arab sex, drug, and violent excess is still viewable.
Dubai's Crown Prince looks stoned and bloated, and is being kept out of the media in his own home country. The reason? Secret diplomatic information via Wikileaks revealed that the Crown Prince Sheikh "Fazza" Hamdan was actually a long-standing drug addict who had been admitted for (failed) rehab several times. This report disappeared from the web after a few weeks.
A stoned out Prince Hamdan: The unofficial image of the real Sheikh Hamdan today, taken by one of his friends: the sporty and fit prince is now a bloated, fat and stoned Prince who is kept hidden from too many photographers nowadays after his increased drug abuse dependence. He does seem to be back to public functions after a period of silence (did the drug-rehab finally work?) but the pictures of him keep being old ones, published over 5 years ago. Secret diplomatic Wikileaks cables revealed that the Crown Prince of Dubai Sheikh “Fazza” Hamdan is actually a notorious drug and sex addict, frequent with gay orgies, roaming in European cities looking for male ‘tops’ and ‘bottoms’ and even incestuous relations. Fazza had been sent abroad to (failed) rehab several times.

Perverted gay sex orgy addict and drug user (top or bottom?) Prince “Fazza” with his father HH Emir Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum
 I'm adding what happens to a princess' in Saudi Arabia when they don't follow the King. We know members of this family can't say what they want. They might do what they want but there is a but. They have power, money, boys or girls o both as long as they tow the line of the kingdom.  The following story came from the BBC and was published on August 15, 2017. These are Princess' that got to be controversial either because they wanted more power or felt strongly about some political issue from the king. They have disappeared and no one is heard of them. One of them was kidnapped flying what he thought was a private jet to Rome instead it took him to Dubai Airport.No one is heard of him since.

Prince Sultan bin Turki, pictured centreImage copyrightHUGH MILES
Image captionPrince Sultan bin Turki, pictured center

In the last two years, three Saudi princes living in Europe have disappeared. All were critical of the Saudi government - and there is evidence that all were abducted and flown back to Saudi Arabia… where nothing further has been heard from them.
Early in the morning on 12 June 2003, a Saudi prince is being driven to a palace on the outskirts of Geneva.
His name is Sultan bin Turki bin Abdulaziz, and the palace belongs to his uncle, the late King Fahd. It's the king's favorite son, Prince Abdulaziz bin Fahd, who has invited him to breakfast.
Abdulaziz asks Sultan to return to Saudi Arabia - where he says a conflict over Sultan's criticisms of the Saudi leadership will be resolved. 
Sultan refuses, at which point Abdulaziz excuses himself to make a phone call. The other man in the room, the Saudi Minister of Islamic Affairs, Sheikh Saleh al-Sheikh, leaves too and after a few moments masked men rush in. They beat Sultan and handcuff him, then a needle is plunged into his neck.
Unconscious, Sultan is rushed to Geneva airport - and carried on to a Medevac plane that is conveniently waiting on the tarmac.
Such, at least, is Sultan's account of the events, as told to a Swiss court many years later.
Among Sultan's staff, waiting at a Geneva hotel for him to return from his breakfast appointment, was his communications officer, Eddie Ferreira.
"Progressively, as the day went on the silence became deafening," he remembers. "We couldn't reach the security team. That was the first real alert. We tried to contact the prince; there was no response, no answer."
Then, in the afternoon, two unexpected visitors arrived.
"The Saudi ambassador to Switzerland came in with the general manager of the hotel and quite simply just told everybody to vacate the penthouse and get out," Ferreira says. "The prince was in Riyadh, our services were no longer required, and we could leave."
What had Prince Sultan done that could have led his family to violently drug and kidnap him?
The previous year he had arrived in Europe for medical treatment and started giving interviews critical of the Saudi government. He condemned the country's record on human rights, complained about corruption among princes and officials, and called for a series of reforms.
Ever since 1932, when King Abdulaziz, known as Ibn Saud, founded Saudi Arabia, the country has been ruled as an absolute monarchy. It does not tolerate dissent.


Prince Turki bin Bandar al Saud meets Pakistan's finance minister in 2003Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionPrince Turki bin Bandar meets Pakistan's finance minister in 2003

Prince Turki bin Bandar was once a major in the Saudi police, with responsibility for policing the royal family itself. But a bitter family dispute over a contested inheritance landed him in prison, and on his release, he fled to Paris, where, in 2012, he began posting videos on YouTube calling for reform in Saudi Arabia.
The Saudis reacted as they had with Prince Sultan, and tried to persuade Turki to return. When Ahmed al-Salem, the deputy minister of the interior called, the prince recorded the conversation and posted it online.
"Everybody's looking forward to your return, God bless you," says the deputy minister.
"Looking forward to my return?" replies Turki. "What about the letters your officers send me? 'You son of a whore, we'll drag you back like Sultan bin Turki.'"
The deputy minister replies reassuringly: "They won't touch you. I'm your brother."
"No they're from you," says Turki. "The Ministry of Interior sends them."
Turki went on publishing videos until July 2015. Then, sometime later that year, he disappeared.
"He called me every month or two," says a friend, the blogger and activist Wael al-Khalaf. 
"Then he disappeared for four or five months. I was suspicious. [Then] I heard from a senior officer in the kingdom that Turki bin Bandar was with them. So they'd taken him, he'd been kidnapped."
After a long search for news of Turki, I found an article in a Moroccan newspaper, which said that he had been about to return to France after a visit to Morocco when he was arrested and jailed. Then, following a request from the Saudi authorities, he was deported with the approval of a Moroccan court.
We don't know for certain what happened to Turki bin Bandar, but before he disappeared he gave his friend Wael a copy of a book he'd written, in which he had added what may be a prophetic note.
"Dear Wael, these statements are not to be shared unless I am kidnapped or assassinated. I know I will be kidnapped or they will assassinate me. I also know how they abuse my rights and those of the Saudi people."


Saud bin Saif al-Nasr
Image captionSaud bin Saif al-Nasr

Around the same time as Prince Turki vanished another Saudi prince, Saud bin Saif al-Nasr - a relatively minor royal with a liking for Europe's casinos and expensive hotels - shared a similar fate.
In 2014 Saud began writing tweets that were critical of the Saudi monarchy.
He called for the prosecution of Saudi officials who'd backed the overthrow of Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi the previous year. 
Then, in September 2015, Saud went further.
After an anonymous Saudi prince wrote two letters calling for a coup to remove King Salman, Saud publicly endorsed them - the only royal to do so. This was tantamount to treason and may have sealed his fate.
A few days later, he tweeted: "I call for the nation to turn the content of these letters into popular pressure." Then his Twitter account went silent.
Another dissident prince - Prince Khaled bin Farhan, who fled to Germany in 2013 - believes Saud was tricked into flying from Milan to Rome to discuss a business deal with a Russian-Italian company seeking to open branches in the Gulf.
"A private plane from the company came and took Prince Saud. But it didn't land in Rome, it landed in Riyadh," Khaled says.
"It turned out Saudi intelligence had fabricated the entire operation," he claims.
"Now Prince Saud's fate is the same as Prince Turki's, which is prison… The only fate is an underground prison." Prince Sultan, being higher up the royal pecking order, was shuttled between prison and house arrest. But his health was also deteriorating, so in 2010 the royal family allowed him to seek medical treatment in Boston, Massachusetts.
What he did from the safety of his US exile must have horrified the Saudis - he filed a criminal complaint in the Swiss courts, accusing Prince Abdulaziz bin Fahd and Sheikh Saleh al-Sheikh of responsibility for his 2003 kidnap.
His American lawyer, Clyde Bergstresser, obtained a medical record from King Faisal Specialist Hospital in Riyadh, where Sultan was admitted on 13 June 2003, which indicated that a tube had been placed into his mouth to help him breathe while anesthetized and that one side of his diaphragm was paralyzed - presumably as a result of the assault.
For the first time, a senior Saudi royal was launching a criminal complaint, in a Western court, against another family member.
But Bergstresser says the Swiss authorities have shown little interest in the case. 
"Nothing has been done to pursue what occurred at the airport," he says. "Who were the pilots? What were the flight plans when these planes from Saudi Arabia arrived? This abduction occurred on Swiss soil and one would think that there would be an interest in finding out how that occurred."


Arabian desert from the airImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES

In January 2016, Sultan was staying at an exclusive Paris hotel when, like Saud bin Saif al-Nasr, he was tempted on to an airplane.
He was planning to visit his father, also a well-known critic of the Saudi government, in Cairo, when the Saudi consulate offered him and his entourage of about 18 - including a personal doctor and nurses and bodyguards from the US and Europe - the use of a private jet.
Despite what had happened to him in 2003, he accepted.
Two members of the entourage explain how events unfolded. Both prefer to remain anonymous.
"We pulled on to the tarmac and in front of us was a huge airplane, with... it had the country of Saudi Arabia written on it," says one.
"It was a little eerie because there were a lot of crew members on board. All of them were male," says the other.
The plane took off with in-flight monitors showing it was bound for Cairo. But two-and-a-half hours into the flight, the monitors went blank.
Prince Sultan was sleeping in his room, but he woke up about an hour before landing. He looked out of the window, and appeared anxious, the former members of his staff say.
As it dawned on the passengers that they were about to land in Saudi Arabia, Sultan started banging on the cockpit door and crying for help. A crew member ordered the prince's team to stay in their seats.
"We looked out the window and we just saw a bunch of people get out with their rifles slung over their chest and surrounded the plane," says one of the members of his entourage.
The soldiers and cabin crew dragged Sultan from the plane. He was screaming at his team to call the US embassy.
The prince and his medics were taken to a villa and put under armed guard. On the plane, the others waited nervously. They were later taken to a hotel, held for three days without passports or telephones, then allowed to fly to a destination of their choice.
Before they left, a Saudi official, who the prince's staff recognized as one of the "flight attendants" on the plane, offered an apology.
"He told us that we were simply in the wrong place at the wrong time. And that he was sorry for the inconvenience," one of them says.
The other adds: "I wasn't inconvenienced - I was kidnapped. I was held against my will in a country that I did not choose to go to."
It was an astonishing situation. Together with Prince Sultan, about 18 foreign nationals had been kidnapped, taken to Saudi Arabia, and held by the Saudi military.
There has been no news of Prince Sultan since these events.
I asked the government of Saudi Arabia to respond to the allegations in this film. It declined to comment.


Prince Khaled
Image captionPrince Khaled

Meanwhile, Prince Khaled, still exiled in Germany, worries that he too will be forced to return to Riyadh. 
"There were four of us family members in Europe. We criticized the family and its rule in Saudi Arabia. Three of us were kidnapped. I'm the only one left," he says.
Could he be next on the abduction list?
"I'm convinced. I've been convinced for a long time. If they could do it, they'd have done it by now. I'm very cautious, but it's at the price of my freedom." 

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