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إدارة الموقع

Mostafa Deeb to Echorouk: “I was detained and tortured by Gaddafi”

الشروق أونلاين
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Mostafa Deeb to Echorouk: “I was detained and tortured by Gaddafi”

An Algerian Businessman, who disappeared since years ago, returned to his hometown in Souk Noueman, Oum El Baouaki (eastern Algeria), not as he was generous and rich in each time he returned home, but as a beggar, calling upon the Algerian authorities perhaps they can get a little bit from what he wasted from years of age, wealth and health.

Mr. Moustapha Deeb, was born in 1964 in Souk Noman, he is currently residing with his Algerian family in his hometown. He was an important businessman, who visited many countries of the world such as Turkey, Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria and other countries, then he settled in the Republic of the late Muammar Gaddafi,on the sixth of August 1989, and this once he finished performing the duty of national service, and that was through the gate of Aldbdab,. He lived in Libya with his family after he married Libyan woman from a wealthy family in 1995, whose name was Ms. Sorour Al Hadi Abou Qasim Jalual, and got a large property, including an line moving between Libya and Egypt, and was so out of the street of Asswahili in Tripoli to reach Port Said in Egypt for six years of work, and this was one of his business that has grown resounding year after year, until he became one of the wealthiest and successful businessmen in the north of the continent.

He was residing in the area of Yafran, about 144 km from Tripoli, where he settled his business as well, which was according to the law in force in Libya and the world, but in the early years of the national tragedy in Algeria, and after the home of Mustafa Deeb became the destination of many Algerians, who saught security in the country of Gaddafi at that time, and his generosity and love for his race, including seven doctors who descended from Batna (eastern Algeria), and three entire families from Tipaza (eastern Algiers) and many people from different regions of Algeria, as he provided shelter and food for those people who ask his help, but one day he found himself without property or identity and outside all types of contact with the outside world without trial.

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