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  • 5/24/2025
✩ Ghost Miracle News Presents ✩
The Hidden Trail: Ukraine's Post-Soviet Weapons Flow
After the fall of the USSR, Ukraine held one of the largest leftover military arsenals — valued at over $90 billion, according to global defense experts.
Former Bosnian intelligence officer Dževad Galijašević reveals how some of these weapons reached conflict zones far beyond Europe.
⚠️ Today, with massive foreign arms flowing into Ukraine, new questions arise about tracking, diversion, and black market risks.
🎥 In this documentary, we uncover:
➤ How Cold War weapons resurfaced in modern conflicts
➤ What experts and insiders have to say
➤ Why arms tracking is now a global concern
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Transcript
00:00Dramatic Music
00:25Dramatic Music
00:37October 2023, a surprise attack launched against Israel by Hamas militants shocked the world.
00:44Shouting
00:49No one had expected the Palestinian radicals to have so many cutting edge weapons.
00:58In the aftermath of the attack, militants openly and mockingly thanked the U.S. and Ukraine
01:03for the rockets and missiles that rained down on Israeli cities.
01:07Shouting
01:14How can it be that arms are shipped to the Middle East from a country whose top officials
01:18constantly complain about shortages of ammunition and military equipment?
01:22Shouting
01:28U.S. and EU military aid totals tens of billions of dollars.
01:33We'll continue to show the power of partnership.
01:36We'll continue to bolster Ukraine's armed forces by rushing them the capabilities that they need to defend their country.
01:42But where does this aid really go?
01:45And who decided to arm a country that has been one of the biggest supermarkets of smuggled weapons for almost 30 years?
01:52Dramatic Music
02:02Dramatic Music
02:12Dramatic Music
02:19Dramatic Music
02:25Speaking in Arabic
02:43Radwan Mortada is an independent Lebanese journalist.
02:47And during his career he's produced hundreds of reports on wars in the Middle East.
02:52He's met with Islamic Jihadist leaders many times and knows exactly how weapons get into their hands.
02:59Speaking in Arabic
03:22Radwan was shocked to learn that arms are trafficked to the Middle East mainly from Ukraine.
03:28His findings are corroborated by the largest arms dealers in the region.
03:33Speaking in Arabic
03:48Phone ringing
03:50Speaking in Arabic
04:00Speaking in Arabic
04:20Mafia arms dealers set up a meeting in a small town on the Lebanese border.
04:26One of the main arms trafficking routes in the Middle East passes through here.
04:33Speaking in Arabic
04:52The Lebanese town of Zarqali, a 30 minute drive from the Syrian border.
04:57A meeting is arranged here with a guide who will take the journalist to a major arms dealer.
05:02Speaking in Arabic
05:17An unremarkable grey house on the outskirts.
05:20But this modest exterior hides what resembles an arms warehouse.
05:27Arms smuggling is big business for the locals.
05:30And sometimes it's the only way to survive.
05:33Speaking in Arabic
05:54These images were taken a year before the Palestinian-Israeli conflict escalated.
05:59A time when massive arms purchases started across the region.
06:03Speaking in Arabic
06:30Speaking in Arabic
06:43Speaking in Arabic
06:48Speaking in Arabic
07:18Speaking in Arabic
07:30Speaking in Arabic
07:36Speaking in Arabic
07:40Speaking in Arabic
07:51Speaking in Arabic
07:58Speaking in Arabic
08:19Speaking in Arabic
08:43Why are weapons from Ukraine spreading all over the world?
08:47Who turned this country into a major arms hub?
08:50To answer these questions, we need to go back in time to 1991.
08:55Speaking in Arabic
09:13On December the 26th, 1991, Soviet news broadcast reported...
09:18Speaking in Arabic
09:48At the time, so-called Cold War arsenals were held in Ukraine.
09:52The world's largest warehouses of arms and military equipment...
09:56...stored in case of a conflict with the United States.
10:00Speaking in Arabic
10:22After July the 1st, 1991, when the Warsaw Pact dissolved, the arsenals grew even bigger.
10:28The eight-nation Eastern European bloc, whose mission had been to maintain peace in post-war Europe, was abolished.
10:35Weapons from all Soviet military units were repatriated.
10:39Speaking in Arabic
10:45Most of the weapons were sent to Ukraine.
10:48Speaking in Arabic
11:11After the Soviet Union collapsed, Ukraine, now independent, came into possession of, according to the most conservative estimates, 9,000 tanks, 11,000 armored vehicles, 18,000 artillery systems, 4,000 aircraft and helicopters, in addition to tens of millions of small arms and billions of rounds of ammunition.
11:32London's International Institute for Strategic Studies said Ukraine's military property was worth around $90 billion.
11:39Speaking in Arabic
12:03Within a month of the USSR's collapse, the new Ukrainian state launched a global sell-off of Soviet weapons.
12:11The first contracts were signed shortly after.
12:15And in 1991, a series of civil wars broke out in Yugoslavia.
12:21Speaking in Arabic
12:37The war in Bosnia and Herzegovina was the largest of the conflicts.
12:42Speaking in Arabic
13:12In the early 1990s, Djevad Galjasevic was an intelligence officer in Bosnia.
13:20He saw how weapons flooded into the former Yugoslavia.
13:23Speaking in Arabic
13:54Speaking in Arabic
14:07Djevad has kept some of the documents that confirm the weapon's Ukrainian origin.
14:12Speaking in Arabic
14:26Speaking in Arabic
14:43Heavy weapons were delivered to Bosnia by sea from Odessa.
14:47The cargo went through the Croatian ports of Rijeka and Split.
14:51Small arms and ammunition were often delivered by aircraft piloted by Ukrainians.
14:56Speaking in Arabic
15:26Speaking in Arabic
15:46Leonid Minin, an entrepreneur close to Ukraine's top leadership, was one of those who oversaw arms shipments.
15:54This rare footage shows Minin watching a small arms demonstration with colleagues.
16:00We'd never have learned of the existence of this major trafficker of death if it hadn't been for one odd incident.
16:07Speaking in Arabic
16:37Speaking in Arabic
16:44That was how the arms baron was caught by the Italian police.
16:47In his room they found piles of cocaine, $150,000 in cash, diamonds and documents in a briefcase.
16:54Speaking in Arabic
17:03Here's one of the documents from that briefcase.
17:06An arms order signed by the Cote d'Ivoire's Minister of Defense.
17:095 million rounds of ammunition, 10,000 grenades, thousands of automatic rifles and grenade launchers.
17:16Speaking in Arabic
17:31Speaking in Arabic
17:45Massimo Alberizi is a legendary war journalist who specializes in reporting on conflicts in Africa.
17:52Speaking in Arabic
18:10One of Minin's companies was called ETTE, which stands for Exotic and Tropical Timber Enterprise.
18:18Officially it conducted logging operations in Liberia, but in fact, as confirmed by a UN special commission,
18:25it supplied arms to President Charles Taylor, a ruthless dictator guilty of genocide against his country's citizens.
18:33Speaking in Arabic
18:51This is not a military coup, this is a pure civilian uprising.
18:59Speaking in Arabic
19:02Using dummy companies, Minin acquired weapons through the UkrSpetsExport Corporation,
19:09a government entity which in the early 2000s was the main supplier of weapons to African dictators.
19:15Speaking in Arabic
19:31But payments for the deadly cargoes were usually made in ways uncommon for government entities.
19:37Speaking in Arabic
19:57Speaking in Arabic
20:15For large shipments of weapons, Ukrainian war barons chartered aircraft which were registered in offshore zones.
20:22Most armed shipments were carried on a BAC-111, owned by an Israeli businessman of Ukrainian origin, Leonid Minin.
20:31Speaking in Arabic
20:33Registered in the Caymans, it was operated by LIMERD, a firm registered in Monaco.
20:39These are photos of one of the airlines that arrived in Liberia, circumventing the UN arms embargo.
20:45It's stacked full of weapons boxes. The plane was owned by Leonid Minin.
20:51The first delivery arranged by Minin in March 1999 was a cargo of 68 tons of military equipment,
21:00including 3,000 AKM assault rifles, 1 million rounds of ammunition, 25 RPG-7s, and related ordnance,
21:11STERLA-3 and METIS systems and 80 related missiles.
21:16The arms were bought from the Ukrainian arms marketing company UkrSpetsExport.
21:22Minin's and his business partners' names and their involvement in UkrSpetsExport's arms deliveries
21:28surfaced during investigations into arms dealing in the Middle East.
21:32Payments of the shipment show the global nature of the arms deal arranged by Minin.
21:38Italian prosecution authorities were directed, reportedly by Minin himself,
21:44to a Hungarian bank account owned by a company allegedly related to Minin.
21:49Further payments from the same amount were made to various companies,
21:54including UkrSpetsExport, Aircoil, Transbalkan Cargo Service,
22:02Konex Arsenal, General Technical Bulgaria.
22:09The scale of the trade is astonishing.
22:11Hundreds of thousands of tons of contraband were applied between the continents.
22:17For some odd reason, it went unnoticed for many years.
22:21The second arms delivery arranged by Minin was routed via Cote d'Ivoire rather than Burkina Faso.
22:29The arms deal consisted of 113 tons of arms brokered through the Ukrainian state-owned company
22:40and included 10,500 AK-47 assault rifles, 120 sniper guns, 100 grenade launchers,
22:51night vision equipment and 8 million rounds of ammunition.
22:55A portion of these arms was delivered in July 2000,
23:00apparently destined for Cote d'Ivoire using an end-user certificate signed on May 26, 2000,
23:08by a senior official of the Ministry of Defense.
23:11The officials mentioned in the documents, their patrons in Kiev and Minin and his friends,
23:16didn't seem to be on intelligence agencies' radars.
23:19Minin had easily obtained numerous international passports found during the raid on his hotel room in Italy.
23:25He had a German passport, a Ukrainian passport,
23:31and an Israeli passport.
23:33So he also had what allowed him to travel very easily.
23:37However, he indicated that he had good passports.
23:41So it was necessary for him to have all these passports.
23:46Then they denied why he had them.
23:48He said, the Germans never gave him the passports.
23:52During his investigation, the journalist concluded that without the support of U.S. Top Brass,
23:58it would have been impossible to implement such a colossal trade of Ukrainian arms.
24:03Through the black market, they managed to solve some sensitive issues.
24:08We worked on this huge amount of documents,
24:13which allowed us to understand that the evidence is in the waybill,
24:16the evidence is in the payments, the evidence is in the bank accounts.
24:22But there are also all the relationships they maintained with each other,
24:26these people, in their business.
24:32Businesses of various kinds.
24:34The illegal arms market is hidden, it's a secret, because it's legal.
24:41We found on this documentation that he was the author of these arms sales.
24:49But he was also the one who maintained relations with a series of arms dealers.
24:56For example, with Mark Ritch, a famous arms dealer,
25:00awarded by Clinton in the last days of his presidency.
25:05Linin's billionaire lifestyle, dalliances with African terrorists
25:09and connections with politicians and government officials all around the world,
25:13even inspired Hollywood.
25:15The film's story is quite accurate.
25:17But unlike Nicolas Cage's character, cops didn't go after Minin.
25:21Despite overwhelming evidence,
25:24an Italian court only charged him with possession of drugs and diamonds.
25:28In Italy, justice is quite long.
25:32There are the poor who wait to have justice for years.
25:36Mr. Minin manages to get the appeal,
25:40and then he is acquitted in less than a year.
25:47This is disturbing.
25:49I have to say that we try to understand what's going on,
25:52but we don't know what's going on at all.
26:11It's a phenomenal legislation.
26:13Anyone can export weapons,
26:16which are registered not as weapons, but as goods.
26:20And this is in accordance with Ukrainian legislation.
26:23A special hole was made in the legislation.
26:41We saw pirates in such binoculars for the first time.
27:02The ship was seized.
27:06At 4 p.m. at the dock,
27:09we noticed a boat on the horizon.
27:14People were waving their hands on the boat.
27:19They were getting closer and closer,
27:22and then the shooting started.
27:25It turned out so.
27:27They had the equipment.
27:29One group boarded the ship,
27:31the other covered them with fire.
27:34There were also two RPG shots.
27:37One fell into the sea,
27:39not far from the port,
27:42and the second hit the port,
27:44but did not explode.
27:46From this I have long concluded
27:49that the pirates themselves could not know about the nature of the cargo.
27:53Because if they knew
27:56that a huge number of explosives were being transported there,
28:01they would not have shot for anything.
28:04If 10,000 tons had exploded,
28:07they would have made a big crater in the sea with these pirates.
28:12When they saw,
28:14went down,
28:16looked into the hole,
28:18of course, the eyes of the pirates shone with joy,
28:22because there had never been such a mess.
28:31The pirates contacted journalists
28:33to ensure their spoils would go public.
28:35And so the name of the ship
28:37that hauled the biggest shipment of arms
28:39became known all over the world.
28:42There were 10,000 tons of shells,
28:4533 tanks,
28:476 Grad,
28:496 anti-aircraft guns,
28:51250 RPG-7.
28:53That is, the weaponry was quite modern.
28:56All this was bent.
28:58On the deck, on the upper deck,
29:00nothing was usually exposed.
29:02The upper deck was also intended for cargo.
29:05But this element of secrecy was there.
29:09Of course, to pack a tank in such a way
29:12that it looks like, I don't know,
29:14for example, a school bus, it does not work.
29:17But there, too, at most,
29:19the receivables are hidden,
29:21the delivery route,
29:23and exactly in the same way
29:25the delivery route of Rolke Raffaella was hidden.
29:55There was a large military base in Ilovaysk,
29:58where a fire broke out.
30:00And so I understand that the echo of this fire
30:04was in Fahin.
30:08But no one will conduct this investigation,
30:10is not going to, and will never do it.
30:13The pirates did not even know
30:15who to turn to about the excavation,
30:17because it was clear that too large forces
30:19were involved here.
30:21And in fact, they turned to,
30:23calling the amount more than three million dollars.
30:53Every part who want our liberations.
31:08It was later discovered that the Fahino
31:10was sent on his perilous voyage
31:12by the Karl Bay International Company,
31:14which had direct links with Ukraine's top officials.
31:23The Karl Bay International Company
31:25is a Ukrainian shipping company
31:27that works specifically
31:29in the transportation of military equipment.
31:32And this company's main center
31:34is in Odessa, Ukraine.
31:36But it is registered in the British Virgin Islands,
31:40the British Isles.
31:42And it has branches in several countries.
31:46And there was a press release
31:48about the acquisition of the Fahino ship
31:50by Somali pirates in 2008.
31:54The co-owner of Karl Bay Shipping
31:56was businessman Igor Urbanski.
31:59He created Karl Bay Group Holding in Panama,
32:01from which dozens of offshore companies branched out,
32:04that later covered up arms trading.
32:08From December 2007,
32:10the founder of Karl Bay Group, Mr. Urbanski,
32:12combined his activities with the post
32:14of Deputy Minister of Transport of Ukraine.
32:18In office, he had close ties
32:20with the head of Ukr Spets Export,
32:22Sergey Bondarchuk,
32:24who once said the following.
32:26Everyone knows very well that we don't sell
32:28bananas, pineapples, or any kind of children's toys.
32:31We sell weapons.
32:32Yes, we're also known in the world as arms dealers.
32:35But we must not be ashamed of that.
32:37A lot of people and businesses do it.
32:40It was the Karl Bay Group
32:42that shipped Ukrainian Kh-55 cruise missiles
32:45to Tehran and China.
32:47Tehran's and Beijing's possession of this weapon
32:49provoked a global scandal,
32:51which led to a series of mysterious assassinations
32:54of key players in Ukraine.
33:15There was also an Australian intermediary
33:18who carried out bank transfers
33:20and shipments of aircraft from Gostomel,
33:23which took off with cruise missiles.
33:26That is, we are facing a classic situation
33:29of liquidation and elimination
33:32of the main actors,
33:34and elimination of the masked man
33:37in the event of an accident.
33:39The sorry tale of the illegal trade
33:41in Ukrainian arms
33:44Assassinations and abductions
33:46of those related to the business
33:48persisted for years.
33:50In April 1999,
33:52Boris Marusich, CEO of Ukrinmash,
33:55another of Ukraine's arms-exporting state companies,
33:59died in a car crash.
34:01In January 2004,
34:03Sergei Petrov, head of one of the arms-trading companies,
34:06was killed in a car explosion.
34:08In July 2007,
34:10Oleg Arlov, convicted for illegally trading
34:13in cruise missiles,
34:15was murdered in his prison cell.
34:17In April 2009,
34:19an assassin shot
34:21UkrSpecExport's financial advisor,
34:23Semyon Trakhtenberg.
34:25Several UkrSpecExport employees
34:28periodically died
34:30during the last 20 years.
34:32This surprised people
34:34who seemed to be protected
34:37from such excesses
34:39as car accidents
34:41or broken bricks.
34:43But they died.
34:48At that time, Ukraine rose
34:50largely due to arms trade.
34:52And most importantly,
34:54the Ukrainian business realized
34:56that there was no need
34:58to create economically profitable enterprises
35:01that were competitive with the West.
35:03It was enough to have arms and sell them.
35:06All types of weapons were on sale.
35:08Tanks,
35:10anti-aircraft guns,
35:12artillery,
35:14shells, ammunition, etc.
35:16By the beginning of the 2000s,
35:18all this weaponry was sold
35:20and went abroad,
35:22to Africa, Latin America,
35:24but primarily to Africa,
35:26and to African countries.
35:28As a rule, all this weaponry was sold
35:30to those states
35:32that were under UN sanctions
35:34and where export of weapons
35:36was generally prohibited.
36:04It's not so scary, the locals say.
36:10An imam invites residents
36:12of the refugee camp for a salaat.
36:16Children play in the yard.
36:18Women in colorful dress
36:20loudly share their news and cook together.
36:22Just the everyday life
36:24of a typical African village.
36:26Except that it's residents.
36:28The hundreds of families
36:30who have settled here
36:32live in poverty.
36:38My name is Bouba Mousachou.
36:40I'm the chairman
36:42of Internet Displaced Persons
36:44in Bouti State, Chad.
36:48I'm almost 63 years old.
36:52I'm a teacher by profession.
36:56I worked for 35 years.
36:58I've become a retiree.
37:02I retired my service
37:04in 2014.
37:06So it has collided
37:08with Boko Haram's
37:10type of displacement.
37:12So,
37:14I came to Bouti.
37:16Boko Haram is one of the world's
37:18most ruthless Islamist groups.
37:20It's terrorized West Africa
37:22for decades.
37:24Boko Haram terrorizes northern Nigeria.
37:26On Saturday, the group
37:28killed more than 100 civilians
37:30in a war feast.
37:32An estimated 36,000 Nigerians
37:34have been killed by Boko Haram
37:36over the past 11 years.
37:40Surprisingly, no one wondered
37:42for some time
37:44where this most bloodthirsty
37:46of terrorist groups
37:48were sourcing their modern
37:50missiles and tanks from.
37:52The Nigerian army has captured
37:54a T-55 armored tank
37:56and a high-tech armored personnel carrier
37:58from Islamist rebels in yesterday's battle
38:00in Kanduga, Orno State.
38:06The weaponry used by the terrorists
38:08was terrifying and unusual.
38:10The locals had never
38:12seen anything like it.
38:28In autumn 2022,
38:30the president of Nigeria
38:32spoke about the Boko Haram
38:34militant sources
38:36for the latest weapons.
38:58...and light weapons,
39:00which continues to threaten
39:02our collective peace and security
39:04in the region.
39:08Nigeria remains one of the centers
39:10of international terrorism.
39:12Streams of weapons from Ukraine
39:14flow there and to other extremist
39:16groups across the Middle East.
39:20Out of the 36 states we have
39:22in Nigeria, only
39:24about five
39:26are not experiencing
39:28serious kidnapping,
39:30serious security
39:32challenges, serious
39:34issues on
39:36kidnapping, banditry,
39:38destruction of communities,
39:40killings. The situation
39:42is terrible. The situation is
39:44getting out of hand.
39:46Now, some of the
39:48insiders I have in the military
39:50confirmed that
39:52yes, there are certain weapons
39:54that are coming from
39:56Ukraine, and
39:58they get to Nigeria.
40:12Ukraine's State Service
40:14for Export Control reports
40:16annually on the volumes of its international
40:18arms trade, but these are only
40:20the official figures covering recent years.
40:24The real volume of weapons exported
40:26from Ukraine are a mystery
40:28to everyone.
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47:54continue pushing to support and strengthen the Ukrainian military for the battles ahead.
48:01Since 2002, NATO countries have supplied tens of billions of dollars worth of weapons to
48:07Ukraine, yet the U.S. and Europe persist in increasing military aid.
48:11Contact group led by the United States, NATO allies and partners have provided unprecedented
48:18support to Ukraine.
48:20More than 98% of the combat vehicles promised to Ukraine have already been delivered.
48:28That means over 1,550 armored vehicles, 230 tanks and other equipment, including vast
48:39amounts of ammunition.
48:41All this time, tried and tested smuggling schemes continue to operate like clockwork,
48:51and weapons are still being exported from Ukraine on a massive scale.
48:56NATO weapons from Ukraine pour into the dark net.
49:02The list of offers includes machine guns, barrage munitions, high-explosive mines, the
49:08latest Javelin grenade launchers, and portable anti-aircraft missile systems.
49:13Independent Russian journalist Mavzes Gazalian, disguised as an Arab militant, contacted several
49:19sellers.
50:09That's how easily weapons meant to kill Russians ended up in the Gaza Strip.
50:25And ironically, on the border of the United States itself.
50:38These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
50:47of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
50:51These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
50:59of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
51:20These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
51:30of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
51:33These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
51:43of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
51:46These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
51:54of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
51:57These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
52:04of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
52:07These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
52:14of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
52:17These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
52:24of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
52:27These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
52:34of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
52:37These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
52:44of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
52:47These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
52:54of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
52:57These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
53:03of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
53:06These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
53:12of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
53:15These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
53:21of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
53:24These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
53:30of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
53:31These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
53:32of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
53:33These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
53:34of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
53:35These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
53:36of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
53:37These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
53:38of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
53:39These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
53:40of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
53:41These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
53:42of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
53:43These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
53:44of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
53:45These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
53:46of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
53:47These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
53:48of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
53:49These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
53:50of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.
53:51These images, procured by Mexican journalists, show a bandit from the Cartel del Golfo, one
53:52of Mexico's oldest criminal gangs.

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