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The Asians in UK crime Thread

British authorities launched a murder investigation and an international manhunt for three persons suspected of involvement in the killing of Sara Sharif, 10-year-old girl found dead in a house in Surrey on August 10.

The girl's body was found in her family house in Woking in the early hours of the morning

MailOnline quoted a Surrey Police spokesman as saying: "Detectives have confirmed that no other people were present at the address when they attended in the early hours of Thursday morning. The three people they would like to speak to were known to the victim."

The British daily The Independent also reported that the three individuals booked one-way flights out of the country before her body was discovered.

A travel agent in the town has now told the BBC that he was contacted on August 8 by someone who knew the girl, wanting tickets to Pakistan for three adults and five children.

Det Supt Mark Chapman, of the Surrey Police and Sussex Police major crime team, also told the BBC that officers are not looking to identify anyone else in connection with the investigation.

The National Crime Agency (NCA) has also revealed it is working with Surrey Police in their investigation.
 
^ As disgusting as a murder can be.

Poor child was harmed for a long period of time. Now the father, step mother and uncle are on the run. Hope they are caught quickly and punished severely.
 
Police in Pakistan are seeking to arrest the father of 10-year-old Sara Sharif in connection with her death, officers in the eastern Punjab province said on Saturday.

Sara was found dead at her home in Woking, Surrey, on 10 August.

Police in the UK earlier identified her father, Urfan Sharif, his partner, Beinash Batool, and Mr Sharif's brother, Faisal Shahzad Malik, as people they want to speak to as part of a murder investigation.

Mr. Sharif travelled to the Pakistani capital of Islamabad with Ms Batool and Mr Malik on 9 August.

His family home is in Jhelum, Punjab, around 84 miles from the capital.

There are five children with the group, ranging from one to 13 years of age, the police said in a statement.

Officer Imran Ahmed said police found evidence that Mr Sharif briefly returned to Jhelum, before leaving and going into hiding.

While another officer in Jhelum, Nisar Ahmed, said he and his men visited the village of Kari - where Mr Sharif was born - but learned the family left around 20 years ago and never returned.

There is no formal extradition treaty between the UK and Pakistan.

The cause of Sara's death is "still to be established" but a post-mortem revealed that she suffered "multiple and extensive injuries", which were "likely to have been caused over a sustained and extended period of time".

It is now known that Mr Sharif called 999 from Islamabad on 10 August, expressing a concern for his eldest daughter's safety - although the exact details of the conversation are unknown.

Sky News has seen the passports and holding plane tickets for Mr Sharif, Ms Batool and Mr Malik.

Eight tickets in total were booked by Sara's father.

Officers from Surrey Police remain at the family's property in Hammond Road in Horsell, a village less than a mile north of Woking town centre.

They continue to work with international authorities.
 
Question now is will the Pakistani police for once do the right thing? Will they have the capability to capture these three who are probably on the run. What lies will they have told their family/friends because no doubt they will have have come up with some story.
 
Question now is will the Pakistani police for once do the right thing? Will they have the capability to capture these three who are probably on the run. What lies will they have told their family/friends because no doubt they will have have come up with some story.
Because of International pressure you will see how quickly they will be arrested ASAP
 
A man whose "meet and greet" service promised to put air passengers' cars in a secure compound but instead left them in a farmer's field has been jailed.

Mohammed Isaq, of Davenport Green Hall, Hale Barns, charged up to £70 to collect cars from Manchester Airport between August 2017 and February 2018 and park them securely.

The 62-year-old instead left up to 500 cars in the field or nearby streets.

Isaq admitted fraudulent trading and was sentenced to 17 months in prison.

Manchester Crown Court heard some vehicles were returned damaged and scratched, with mud both inside and out, and had clearly been used without the permission of the owners while they were away.

The court was told Isaq was involved with three firms, one of which suffered a break-in at its "office", which was actually the back of a broken-down van.

The break-in led to 130 sets of keys and several vehicles being stolen, which caused "chaos" when owners returned to the airport.

One customer used an app on her mobile phone while abroad to track her car and found it was being driven around Manchester while the firm insisted it was in a compound.

'Litany of incompetence'
Adam Pearson, prosecuting, said another driver received two parking fines while his car was supposed to be parked up with the firm.

A further driver, who owned a BMW, took a photo of his mileage before his trip and found his car had been driven 688 miles while he was away.

He also found cigarette papers and cannabis inside the vehicle.

Mr Pearson said another car had suffered "substantial damage" in a crash with a bus, which was captured on the bus's internal camera.

The three parking firms Isaq was involved with, which operated one after another as each was dissolved, were Manchester Airport Parking Ltd, Manchester Airport Parking Services and Manchester Meet and Greet Ltd.

The court heard the combined turnover was up to £200,000, but the extent of the fraudulent trading was between £30,000 and £100,000.

Jailing Isaq, Judge John Potter said he had been the "main instigator" involved in the "exploitation of consumers by the adoption of unscrupulous business practices".

He added that customers had endured "a litany of incompetence, lack of planning and wilful neglect".

Isaq, who had previous convictions for VAT fraud and breaking fire regulations, was also banned from being a company director for six years.

His son, Sultan Khan, 28, and daughter, Amani, 27, who acted as directors for one of the firms, pleaded guilty to breaking consumer protection laws by negligence.

Each was given an 18-month community order and 200 hours' unpaid work.

A proceeds of crime hearing will take place at a later date to recover prosecution costs and compensation for motorists affected.

Speaking after sentencing, Trafford Council, which brought the prosecution, said it was "an appalling case in which customers were lied to and taken advantage of".
 
TikTok influencer Mahek Bukhari and her mother jailed for life for double murder after sex tape threat.

Mahek Bukhari and her mother Ansreen were convicted of double murder last month after killing Ansreen's lover and another man during a high-speed chase through Leicestershire.

TikTok influencer Mahek Bukhari and her mother have both been jailed for life for double murder following a sex tape threat.

Bukhari sobbed in the dock last month as she was found guilty of murdering her mother's lover and his friend in a high-speed car chase.

Her mother Ansreen Bukhari, 46, was also found guilty of the murders following a trial at Leicester Crown Court.

Saqib Hussain and Mohammed Hashim Ijazuddin, both 21, died when their Skoda "virtually split in two" and caught fire after leaving the A46 dual carriageway near Leicester before hitting a tree in the early hours of 11 February 2022.

Mr Hussain had threatened to reveal the affair he and Ansreen Bukhari had been having.

Rekan Karwan, 29, who brought in Raees Jamal, 23, to help carry out the murders after Bukhari approached him, were also jailed for life with a minimum of 26 years and 10 months and 31 years respectively for two counts of murder.

Natasha Akhtar, 23, was jailed for 11 years and eight months, while Ameer Jamal, 28, and Sanaf Gulamustafa, 23, were jailed for 14 years and eight months and 14 years and nine months respectively for two counts of manslaughter.

All were present in the two vehicles, an Audi TT and a Seat Leon, used in the fatal car chase.

 

Three jailed over £2m counterfeit drug operation on dark web​


Three men have been jailed after the Met busted a £2m dark web counterfeit drugs operation.

The trip was sentenced to a total of 14 years at Isleworth Crown Court.

The Met Police’s Cyber Crime Unit led the investigation after they received intelligence from the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) in the US that the men were selling pharmaceutical drugs on the internet.

Allen Valentine, his son Roshan Valentine and childhood friend Krunal Patel were producing and selling Benzodiazepines, a type of sedative, which is a Class C drug. They made at least £2 million in illicit profit, the court had heard.

The three also had several accounts on different dark web markets and advertised the sale of Xanax, Diazepam and in the past Valium.

Detectives began the investigation in January 2022 and, soon after, they discovered the three men were visiting a warehouse unit at Acton Business Centre.

It was from here that the drugs were produced, packaged and supplied. The men were operating under the guise of a company called Puzzle Logistics Limited that was formed in 2016, the court had heard.

Counterfeit drugs lab (Metropolitan Police)© Provided by Evening Standard

Each of the men visited the unit on a daily basis, often staying for much of the day. Krunal Patel would frequently leave with large bags, returning 10 to 15 minutes later without the contents of the bags.

Users would purchase the drugs on the dark web, paying in cryptocurrency, which were then posted.

The Cyber Crime Unit has detailed knowledge of the dark web and training in cryptocurrency, allowing them to efficiently progress the investigation.

Detectives utilised specialist cyber tactics to prove it was the Valentines’ and Patel who were making and selling the illegal substances.

They determined the three men converted £2m from cryptocurrency into fiat currency (sterling), the accounts have been frozen by police.

On August 17 2022, Krunal Patel was arrested near to the warehouse, with 15 parcels labelled for posting to addresses across the UK.

Inside those parcels were tablets imprinted “Xanax” and “Teva”, both brand names for licensed medicines within the Benzodiazepine group. Roshan and Allen Valentine were arrested later that same day.

Officers searched the warehouse and found a concealed laboratory where a large amount of equipment and several containers of chemical substances were discovered, along with numerous crates of pills manufactured on site.

The pills were analysed and found to contain Class C drugs from the Benzodiazepine group including Deschloroetizolam, Flubromazepam, Bromazolam and Flualprazolam.

Allen Valentine told the jury he was a doctor and has qualifications in pharmacy, enquiries are currently ongoing to verify the claims.

All three were charged with conspiracy to produce Class C drugs and money laundering offences on 19 August 2022 and were remanded in custody.

Detective Constable Alex Hawkins, of the Met’s Cyber Crime Unit led the investigation. He said:“The three men ran a sophisticated, large scale production of fake pharmaceutical drugs sold on the dark web that appeared to be genuine. Their operation was solely for the greed of those involved bearing no concern for the vulnerabilities of those purchasing these drugs.

“Some of the drugs contained completely different chemicals from those which should be in the genuine tablets; some of them are extremely dangerous.

“This is the first seizure of those chemicals in the UK and as such legislation will be amended later this year to include these drugs under the Misuse of Drugs Act as Class A substances. Stopping the manufacturing of these drugs has removed a significant risk to the public.

“We would like to thank pharmaceutical companies Viatris and Teva UK for assisting the Met in our investigation and supporting our prosecution against these dangerous and fraudulent men.

“I’d urge anyone to seek medical advice and obtain a prescription for medication through a doctor. If you buy from the dark web there is no guarantee what is in the substances, as with this case.”

Detective Superintendent Helen Rance leads the Cyber Crime Unit, she said:“Our specialist Cyber Crime Unit are experts at infiltrating the sale of illegal items on the dark web. We work collaboratively with International Law Enforcement partners to ensure operations like this are stopped in their tracks.”

Patel, 40, of Harrow was sentenced to six years’ imprisonment while Roshan Valentine, 39, from Northwood, was given a seven-year jail term. Allen Valentine of Harrow was sentenced to 11 years.

Evening Standard
 

west London crime group smuggled around £70 million in cash out of the UK. It was transported over hundreds of trips to Dubai between 2017 and 2019.

National Crime Agency officers believe the money was profit from the sale of class A drugs and organised immigration crime. Around £1.5 million of this was seized from couriers leaving the UK.

A plot was also uncovered to smuggle 17 migrants, including five children and a pregnant woman, into the UK in the back of a van carrying tyres in 2019. The van was intercepted by Dutch police, before it could reach a ferry at the Hook of Holland.
 
Blackburn man who posed as taxi driver admits raping women

A man who posed as a taxi driver has admitted raping women he picked up as they made their way home from nights out.

Nazim Asmal lured his victims into his car before driving to remote locations and assaulting them.

The 34-year-old, formerly of Blackburn, appeared at Preston Crown Court where he pleaded guilty to four counts of rape and sexual assault.

He was remanded into custody to be sentenced on 13 February.

Lancashire Police said the first rape happened on 3 October 2021 after the victim was picked up by Asmal in Preston city centre.

He drove for about ten minutes, raped her in the car and then dropped her off back in the city centre.

She flagged a member of the public down for help.

The second rape happened on 4 March when the victim got into Asmal's fake taxi after a night out in Darwen.

He drove her to a secluded area on the outskirts of the town where he assaulted her.

Asmal later called her twice in April and she recognised his voice as the man who had raped her but did not know his identity.

She ended the call after he asked her if she "wanted to do something", police said.

Asmal raped his third victim, who he picked up in Darwen town centre, on the same evening he made that phone call.

Driving her towards Bolton, in the opposite direction of her home, Asmal said: "You don't want to pay for this taxi, do you?"

He stopped in a secluded area and raped her. He then dropped her off at her home.

Detectives identified Asmal after his black Toyota Yaris was picked up on CCTV cameras.

Det Insp Darren Irving said: "Asmal deliberately targeted his victims because of their vulnerable state and subjected them to serious sexual assaults."

He said his crimes were "abhorrent", adding: "My thoughts are very much with the victims who continue to be supported by specially trained officers."



 
Just finished watching The Detectives - Taking Down an OCG

When a man is attacked with an axe on a Rochdale estate and a local gang member emerges as the main suspect, a small team of specialist police officers launches an attempted murder investigation. The operation leads to an extraordinary two-year operation to take down one of Greater Manchester’s most significant Organised Crime Groups.

Investigating detectives uncover a sophisticated criminal network involved in large-scale drug-dealing, widespread grooming of children to deal drugs, witness intimidation, money laundering and kidnapping - but it soon becomes clear that bringing the gang to justice will not be easy.

Fascinating and at the same time sad to watch.

Highly recommend it.
 
Eighteen men have been jailed after the police uncovered a vast drug supply network in east London.

In total 42 men have been convicted, disrupting the supply of millions of pounds worth of drugs to Hampshire and Brighton, following a three-year investigation by officers from Hackney and Tower Hamlets.

Police found a dedicated drug network after they seized two phones in 2020 and accessed large amounts of data and messages.

The investigation found 14 supply lines which have now been closed.

Police also uncovered a sophisticated criminal network of men who pretended to be cab drivers to supply around 37 kilograms of drugs, including, cocaine, heroin, crack cocaine, MDMA, ketamine and cannabis.

Specialist officers carried out 49 search warrants, leading to 42 men being arrested and charged with drug supply offences.

Jewellery worth £54,000, £200,000 in cash, and drugs with a street value of £83,000 were also seized.

The final 18 men involved were sentenced at Snaresbrook Crown Court between Monday and Thursday.

Between them, they received more than 150 years in prison for their part in supplying illegal drugs.

The other 24 people convicted were jailed for more than 220 years for their part in the offences.

Detective Superintendent Georgina Zumeris said: “This investigation demonstrates Met officers going above and beyond to make London safe by removing drug dealers from the communities of east London.

“This is community crime-fighting at its best, removing offenders who impact the lives of those around them.

“The supply of drugs has devastating consequences on communities across London and beyond – it causes addiction, having devastating health impacts, as well as leading to anti-social behaviour and violence.”

Source: MSN
 
Husband and his parents jailed for leaving wife in vegetative state after arranged marriage

A man and his parents have been jailed after forcing his wife to take medication and covering her in a corrosive substance, leaving her in a vegetative state following their arranged marriage.

Ambreen Fatima Sheikh, then 30, was given the anti-diabetes drug glimepiride, which can be fatal to non-diabetes patients, and likely doused in cleaning product before she was admitted to hospital on 1 August 2015, Leeds Crown Court heard.


 

Sharon Beshenivsky: Piran Ditta Khan jailed for life over PC murder​

The 75-year-old ringleader of an armed robbery in which a police officer was shot dead almost 20 years ago has been jailed for life for her murder.

Piran Ditta Khan spent nearly two decades evading justice for his part in the killing of PC Sharon Beshenivsky in Bradford on 18 November 2005.

Khan, who was extradited from Pakistan last year, was convicted of murder following a trial at Leeds Crown Court.

He was told he would serve a minimum term of 40 years in prison.

The judge, the Honourable Mr Justice Hilliard, said that PC Beshenivsky's "courage and commitment to her duty that day cost her her life".

He told Khan: "The sentence I pass is no measure of the value of the life that has been lost.

"That's beyond measure and no sentence I pass can put right what you've done wrong."

PC Beshenivsky had been responding to reports of an armed robbery at the Universal Express travel agents on Morley Street in Bradford with her colleague, PC Teresa Milburn, when she was fatally attacked.

The two officers arrived at the scene about 15:30 GMT, but as they approached the entrance, three men burst out of the premises, shooting them both.

PC Milburn was seriously injured.

Source: BBC
 
Six semi-professional footballers who sold cocaine with an estimated street value of up to £260m have been jailed for a total of more than 103 years

Police have said the "highly organised" gang, who sold the Class A drug on an "industrial scale", was brought down like a "house of cards" following the arrest of one its members.

Luke Skeete had been pulled over by police while driving a white panel van in October 2022 - and a search of the vehicle uncovered 8kg of cocaine in the back.

The 36-year-old was arrested and a further 123kg of cocaine and 224kg of ketamine was recovered from storage units in west London that he had control of.

Skeete's phone was also seized and sent for specialist interrogation - with officers discovering a secure messaging platform that was used by others.

The Metropolitan Police said the group chats "demonstrated and evidenced a sophisticated, professional business model" that the group had to supply cocaine throughout the UK.

The force added that each associate had used a different label on the messaging platform to conceal their identity and ev ade detectives.

Source: Sky News
 
Men arrested at airport after trying to flee trial

Two men, who tried to flee the country part way through a trial over the death of a man, have been caught at Manchester Airport.

Osama Saeed, 32, and Asgar Taj, 35, fled in October 2023, during their trial for causing the death of Asad Rashid, 34, who was hit in a street race between two cars and two motorcyclists on the A34 Handforth bypass on 15 September 2020.

They previously pled guilty to the charge after dialling into the court from abroad but both men failed to return to court for their sentencing.

Cheshire Police arrested the pair at Manchester Airport on Monday after they travelled to the UK from Abu Dhabi.



 
Muslim investment site embroiled in major ‘Ponzi scheme’ scandal

The head of Muslim investment website, Muslim Pioneer, has become embroiled in what appears to be a major investment fraud scandal after being accused by multiple clients of running a “Ponzi scheme.”

Aaqib Ahmed, the founder of Muslim Pioneer, has been accused of taking significant sums of money based on lucrative promises of high returns on investments whilst knowing he couldn’t produce the returns expected.

Additionally, Mr Ahmed has been accused of moving clients’ money around to make it appear that investors where receiving a genuine return when in fact it was just money taken from other investors.

Yesterday, 5Pillars was granted access to a WhatsApp group called “Victims of Aaqib Ahmed.” The group, which contains well over 100 members, is awash with complaints and stories of alleged victims of Mr Ahmed who say their money has been lost or stollen.

Mr Ahmed, who has been reported to Action Fraud and the police, has subsequently admitted to business “shortcomings” and has pledged to repay his clients.

Confession video

As the story began to spread like wildfire across throughout the UK Muslim community, with more and more testimonies surfacing across WhatsApp or social media, a video emerged which includes an apparent “confession” by Mr Ahmed.

Mr Ahmed can been seen speaking via Zoom about the unfolding scandal with what appears to be former business partners. However, it isn’t clear who he was speaking to or when the video was recorded.

The interviewer said: “Bro you have made tens of millions, where have you put this money?”

 
@mominsaigol thought you might be interested in this thread due to our discussion yesterday about the Pakistani diaspora in the UK being one of the worst
 
Why are you trying to justify discrimination 🤣🤣

I'm not at all. Was just explaining to the guy that it's not racism he's talking about and then he got aggressive saying stuff like you're a 'freshy fob' and I won't let you into my country. I just dish out what I get, except I dish it out 10X
 
Muslim investment site embroiled in major ‘Ponzi scheme’ scandal

The head of Muslim investment website, Muslim Pioneer, has become embroiled in what appears to be a major investment fraud scandal after being accused by multiple clients of running a “Ponzi scheme.”

Aaqib Ahmed, the founder of Muslim Pioneer, has been accused of taking significant sums of money based on lucrative promises of high returns on investments whilst knowing he couldn’t produce the returns expected.

Additionally, Mr Ahmed has been accused of moving clients’ money around to make it appear that investors where receiving a genuine return when in fact it was just money taken from other investors.

Yesterday, 5Pillars was granted access to a WhatsApp group called “Victims of Aaqib Ahmed.” The group, which contains well over 100 members, is awash with complaints and stories of alleged victims of Mr Ahmed who say their money has been lost or stollen.

Mr Ahmed, who has been reported to Action Fraud and the police, has subsequently admitted to business “shortcomings” and has pledged to repay his clients.

Confession video

As the story began to spread like wildfire across throughout the UK Muslim community, with more and more testimonies surfacing across WhatsApp or social media, a video emerged which includes an apparent “confession” by Mr Ahmed.

Mr Ahmed can been seen speaking via Zoom about the unfolding scandal with what appears to be former business partners. However, it isn’t clear who he was speaking to or when the video was recorded.

The interviewer said: “Bro you have made tens of millions, where have you put this money?”


What I hate about people like him is that these individuals will do anything they can to portray themselves as pious. They will use their appearance along with their religiosity to exploit others, when really they have no fear of Allah (SWT).

This is why Umar ibn Al-Khattab (RA) says:

Do not let the prayer of a man deceive you nor his fasting. Rather, look at the truthfulness of his speech, his trustworthiness whenever he is entrusted, and how he acts whenever he is given wealth and power.

 
I'm not at all. Was just explaining to the guy that it's not racism he's talking about and then he got aggressive saying stuff like you're a 'freshy fob' and I won't let you into my country. I just dish out what I get, except I dish it out 10X
Chor do yaar, you're in Canada anyway so you're not missing out on UK, trust me UK is going downhill day by day.
 

UK Drug Bust: Indian Cartel Hid £1.5B Cocaine in Frozen Chicken – One Text Exposed Them | UK Crime​




 

Polo-loving drug lord's double life catches up with him

On the surface, Muhammed Asif Hafeez was an upstanding individual.

A global businessman and ambassador of a prestigious London polo club, he rubbed shoulders with the British elite, including members of the Royal Family.

He also regularly passed on detailed information to the authorities in the UK and Middle East that, in some cases, led to the interception of huge shipments of drugs. He was motivated, he said, simply by what he saw as his "moral obligation to curb and highlight criminal activities".

At least, that is what he would have had people think.

In reality, Hafeez was himself what US officials described as "one of the world's most prolific drug traffickers".

From his residence in the UK, he was the puppet-master of a vast drugs empire, supplying many tonnes of heroin, methamphetamine and hashish from bases in Pakistan and India that were distributed across the world. The gangs he informed on were his rivals - and his motivation was to rid the market of his competitors.

His status in the underworld earned him the moniker "the Sultan".

But this criminal power and prestige would not last forever. After a complex joint operation between the British and American authorities, Hafeez, 66, was extradited from the UK in 2023. He pleaded guilty last November.

On Friday, he was sentenced to 16 years in a New York prison for conspiring to import drugs - including enough heroin for "millions of doses" - into the US. Having been in custody since 2017, Hafeez’s sentence will end in 2033.

The BBC has closely followed Hafeez's case. We have pieced together information from court documents, corporate listings and interviews with people who knew him.

We wanted to find out how he managed to stay under the radar for so long - and how he eventually got caught.


Hafeez was born in September 1958 to a middle-class family in Lahore, Pakistan. One of six children, his upbringing was comfortable. People in Lahore who knew the family told the BBC that his father had owned a factory near the city. Hafeez also later told a US court that he had trained as a commercial pilot.

From the early 1990s to about the mid-2010s, he ran an outwardly legitimate umbrella company called Sarwani International Corporation, with subsidiary businesses in Pakistan, the UAE and the UK.

According to its website - which has since been shut down - it sold technical equipment to militaries, governments and police forces throughout the world, including equipment for drug detection.

Among the other businesses under the Sarwani umbrella were a textiles company registered in various countries, an Italian restaurant in Lahore that was a franchise of a well-known Knightsbridge brand, and a company named Tipmoor, based near Windsor to the west of London, which specialised in "polo and equestrian services".

These businesses not only afforded him a luxury lifestyle, but secured him access to the UK's most exclusive circles. He was listed as an international ambassador for the prestigious Ham Polo Club for at least three years, from 2009 to 2011. He and his wife Shahina were also photographed chatting to Prince William, and embracing Prince Harry, at the club in 2009.

Ham Polo Club told the BBC that Hafeez had never been a member of the club, that the club no longer has "ambassadors", and that the current board "has no ties to him". It added that the event at which Hafeez and his wife were photographed meeting the princes "was run by a third party".

Sarwani's different global arms were dissolved at various stages in the 2010s, according to their listings on Companies House and equivalent global registries.

'Something fishy going on'​

A former Sarwani employee based in the UAE told the BBC he suspected there had been "something fishy going on" when he worked for the business, because even big projects were "only paid for in cash". The employee - who has asked not to be identified, for fear of reprisals - said he eventually left the business because he felt uncomfortable with this.

"There were no [bank] transactions, no records, no existence," he told the BBC.

Hafeez would also periodically write letters to the authorities in the UAE and UK informing on rival cartels, under the guise of being a concerned member of the public.

The BBC has seen these, as well as letters he received in response from the British Embassy in Dubai and the UK Home Office, thanking him and expressing their appreciation for him getting in touch.

The Home Office told the BBC it does not comment on individual correspondence.

The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office and the Government of Dubai were contacted by the BBC for comment but did not respond.

Members of Hafeez's family shared these letters with the BBC in 2018, while he was embroiled in a lengthy legal fight against extradition to the US.

They also submitted them to courts in the UK and, later, to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), as evidence that he had been an informant and needed protection. All the courts disagreed and ruled that this was a ploy by Hafeez to rid the market of competitors.

Hafeez, the ECHR said, was "someone who had brought to the attention of the authorities the criminal conduct of others who he knew to be actual or potential rivals to his substantial criminal enterprise".

On the surface, Muhammed Asif Hafeez was an upstanding individual.

A global businessman and ambassador of a prestigious London polo club, he rubbed shoulders with the British elite, including members of the Royal Family.

He also regularly passed on detailed information to the authorities in the UK and Middle East that, in some cases, led to the interception of huge shipments of drugs. He was motivated, he said, simply by what he saw as his "moral obligation to curb and highlight criminal activities".

At least, that is what he would have had people think.

In reality, Hafeez was himself what US officials described as "one of the world's most prolific drug traffickers".

From his residence in the UK, he was the puppet-master of a vast drugs empire, supplying many tonnes of heroin, methamphetamine and hashish from bases in Pakistan and India that were distributed across the world. The gangs he informed on were his rivals - and his motivation was to rid the market of his competitors.

His status in the underworld earned him the moniker "the Sultan".

But this criminal power and prestige would not last forever. After a complex joint operation between the British and American authorities, Hafeez, 66, was extradited from the UK in 2023. He pleaded guilty last November.

On Friday, he was sentenced to 16 years in a New York prison for conspiring to import drugs - including enough heroin for "millions of doses" - into the US. Having been in custody since 2017, Hafeez’s sentence will end in 2033.

The BBC has closely followed Hafeez's case. We have pieced together information from court documents, corporate listings and interviews with people who knew him.

We wanted to find out how he managed to stay under the radar for so long - and how he eventually got caught.

Hafeez was an ambassador for the prestigious Ham Polo Club, where in 2009 he was pictured with his wife, embracing Prince Harry and chatting to Prince William
Hafeez was born in September 1958 to a middle-class family in Lahore, Pakistan. One of six children, his upbringing was comfortable. People in Lahore who knew the family told the BBC that his father had owned a factory near the city. Hafeez also later told a US court that he had trained as a commercial pilot.

From the early 1990s to about the mid-2010s, he ran an outwardly legitimate umbrella company called Sarwani International Corporation, with subsidiary businesses in Pakistan, the UAE and the UK.

According to its website - which has since been shut down - it sold technical equipment to militaries, governments and police forces throughout the world, including equipment for drug detection.

Among the other businesses under the Sarwani umbrella were a textiles company registered in various countries, an Italian restaurant in Lahore that was a franchise of a well-known Knightsbridge brand, and a company named Tipmoor, based near Windsor to the west of London, which specialised in "polo and equestrian services".

These businesses not only afforded him a luxury lifestyle, but secured him access to the UK's most exclusive circles. He was listed as an international ambassador for the prestigious Ham Polo Club for at least three years, from 2009 to 2011. He and his wife Shahina were also photographed chatting to Prince William, and embracing Prince Harry, at the club in 2009.

Ham Polo Club told the BBC that Hafeez had never been a member of the club, that the club no longer has "ambassadors", and that the current board "has no ties to him". It added that the event at which Hafeez and his wife were photographed meeting the princes "was run by a third party".

Sarwani's different global arms were dissolved at various stages in the 2010s, according to their listings on Companies House and equivalent global registries.
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'Something fishy going on'​

A former Sarwani employee based in the UAE told the BBC he suspected there had been "something fishy going on" when he worked for the business, because even big projects were "only paid for in cash". The employee - who has asked not to be identified, for fear of reprisals - said he eventually left the business because he felt uncomfortable with this.

"There were no [bank] transactions, no records, no existence," he told the BBC.

Hafeez would also periodically write letters to the authorities in the UAE and UK informing on rival cartels, under the guise of being a concerned member of the public.

The BBC has seen these, as well as letters he received in response from the British Embassy in Dubai and the UK Home Office, thanking him and expressing their appreciation for him getting in touch.

The Home Office told the BBC it does not comment on individual correspondence.

The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office and the Government of Dubai were contacted by the BBC for comment but did not respond.

Members of Hafeez's family shared these letters with the BBC in 2018, while he was embroiled in a lengthy legal fight against extradition to the US.

They also submitted them to courts in the UK and, later, to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), as evidence that he had been an informant and needed protection. All the courts disagreed and ruled that this was a ploy by Hafeez to rid the market of competitors.

Hafeez, the ECHR said, was "someone who had brought to the attention of the authorities the criminal conduct of others who he knew to be actual or potential rivals

While Hafeez was writing these letters, a meeting took place in 2014 that - despite him not being there - would lead to his downfall.

Two of Hafeez's close associates met a potential buyer from Colombia in a flat in Mombasa, Kenya. They burned a small amount of heroin in order to demonstrate how pure it was, and said they could supply him with any quantity of "100%... white crystal".

The supplier of this high-quality heroin, they had told the buyer, was a man from Pakistan known as "the Sultan" - that is, Hafeez.

What they would soon learn was that the "buyer" from Colombia was actually working undercover for the US's Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). The entire meeting was part of an elaborate sting operation, and had been covertly filmed - footage that has been obtained by the BBC.

US court documents reveal the deal was co-ordinated by Baktash and Ibrahim Akasha, two brothers who led a violent cartel in Kenya. Their father was himself a feared kingpin who had been killed in Amsterdam's Red Light District in 2000.

The deal also involved Vijaygiri "Vicky" Goswami, an Indian national who managed the Akashas' operations.

In October 2014, with the Akashas, Goswami and Hafeez still unaware of who the buyers really were, 99kg of heroin and 2kg of crystal meth were delivered to the fake Colombian traffickers. The Akashas promised to provide hundreds of kilograms more of each drug.

A month later, the Akasha brothers and Goswami were arrested in Mombasa. They were released on bail shortly afterwards, and spent over two years fighting extradition to the US.

In the background, American law enforcers were working with counterparts in the UK to piece together their case against Hafeez, partly using evidence gathered from devices they had seized when they arrested Goswami and the Akasha brothers. On those, they had found multiple references to Hafeez as a major supplier, and were able to find enough evidence to identify him as "the Sultan".

Facing charges in the US didn't stop one of the men, Goswami, from continuing his illegal enterprise. In 2015, while on bail in Kenya, he hatched a plan with Hafeez to transport several tonnes of a drug called ephedrine from a chemical factory in Solapur, India, to Mozambique.

Ephedrine, a powerful medication that is legal in limited quantities, is used to make methamphetamine. The two men - Goswami and Hafeez - planned to set up a meth factory in Mozambique's capital, Maputo, US court documents show. But their scheme was abandoned in 2016, when police raided the Solapur plant and seized 18 tonnes of ephedrine.

The Akasha brothers and Goswami finally boarded a flight to the US to face trial in January 2017.

Hafeez was arrested eight months later in London, at his flat in the affluent St John's Wood neighbourhood. He was detained at high security Belmarsh Prison in south-east London, and it was from there that he spent six years fighting extradition to the US.

A big development happened in 2019 in the US. Goswami pleaded guilty, and told a New York court he had agreed to co-operate with prosecutors. The Akasha brothers also pleaded guilty.

Baktash Akasha was sentenced to 25 years in prison. His brother Ibrahim was sentenced to 23 years.

Goswami, who is yet to be sentenced, would have testified against Hafeez in the US had the case gone to trial.

From Belmarsh, Hafeez was running out of options.

He tried to stop extradition to the US - but failed to convince magistrates, the High Court in London and the ECHR that he had, in fact, been an informant to the authorities who was "at risk of ill-treatment from his fellow prisoners" as a result.

He also claimed the conditions in a US prison would be "inhuman and degrading" for him because of his health conditions, including type 2 diabetes and asthma.

He lost all of these arguments at every stage and was extradited in May 2023.

His case did not go to trial. In November last year, Hafeez pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiring to manufacture and distribute heroin, methamphetamine and hashish and to import them into the US.

Pre-sentencing, prosecutors described the "extremely fortunate circumstances" of Hafeez's life, which "throw into harsh relief his decision to scheme... and to profit from the distribution of dangerous substances that destroy lives and whole communities".

"Unlike many traffickers whose drug activities are borne, at least in part, from desperation, poverty, and a lack of educational opportunities," they said, "the defendant has lived a life replete with privilege and choice."

BBC
 
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