https://ift.tt/34c9NJd KUWAIT CITY, Nov 6: Former Director of a labor office has been taken to the Central Prison to serve a life term after the Criminal Court found him guilty of trafficking in humans, reports Al- Anba daily. The man was found guilty of bringing into the country menial workers in large numbers and had abandoned them on the streets of Kuwait to find jobs for themselves. According to a security source, the Kuwaiti was seized from his office in downtown Kuwait City and served a notice which said the court had issued a verdict against him. Giving details of the case, sources said the Kuwaiti brought scores of Expats under the sponsorship of his company and left them stranded following which the expatriates sought the intervention of their respective embassies for help because the company could not provide work for them. Some of the expatriates complained to their embassy that each of them had paid approximately $5,000 each service charges and the embassy communicated with the Ministry of Interior and the ministry discovered the suspect was the director of labor force in the company owned by him. It is interesting and surprising that the convict had a lot of tweets in which he criticized the Ministry of Social Affairs for leniency in the flow of migrant workers to the country, leading to the imbalance of the demographics.
https://ift.tt/2BVSIXZ Striding past the glistening rows of duty-free liquor, watches and perfume, the two international travellers moved like men who could fight. Richard ''Gelly'' Gelemanovic had broad shoulders and a confident gait, while his companion, convicted heroin trafficker Amad ''Jay'' Malkoun, had a physique honed during his 16-year stint in prison. It was July 3, 2003, and Malkoun was recently out of jail, having gained public notoriety after being charged in 1988 as a key player in the state's biggest drug syndicate, which had been busted with $5.5 million of heroin. Amad 'Jay' Malkoun was described by police as 'a powerful standover man'. The federal police who were secretly watching Malkoun at Melbourne's international airport described him in a report as ''a powerful stand-over man … actively involved in the Melbourne drug trade''. The profession of his travelling companion, the man Jay called '
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