An informed source: A significant portion of the drugs are currently manufactured and offered for sale in Syria and in Mossad laboratories.
According to Ashura News, the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) announced on July 22 the discovery of one of the largest drug shipments on the country’s southern border. According to the agency’s official statement, on June 12, 2021, a commercial truck that had entered the “Blue Bridge” port of entry from the United States was inspected. Border Patrol agents, with the help of a sniffer dog, were able to discover 161 packages of suspected cocaine weighing approximately 187 kilograms.
The amount of drugs, which was hidden in two suitcases and five garbage bags, is estimated to be worth 23.3 million Canadian dollars.
Now, about a month after the discovery, the Canada Border Services Agency has announced in its supplementary report that the driver of the truck is a person named “Kambiz Karandish”; a 55-year-old citizen of Iranian origin living in Richmond Hill, Ontario. He is currently in the custody of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) and his legal proceedings are underway.
CBSA’s First Report on the Arrest of a Drug Trafficker
A review of Kambiz Karandish’s online activities shows that he was a royalist cyber user who participated in the 1401 sedition and the campaign known as “Reza Pahlavi’s Attorney.”
Karandish was a supporter of Reza Rabe Pahlavi and has repeatedly supported this family. Now, with the revelation of his role in the $23 million cocaine smuggling, widespread reactions have formed on social media.
A source familiar with the arrest of this counter-revolutionary figure told Mashreq that the Mossad is forced to provide drugs to some counter-revolutionary groups to finance their advertising costs due to money laundering issues.
The informed source also added that a significant portion of these drugs are currently being manufactured and sold in Syria and in Mossad laboratories, and a portion of the proceeds from drug production are also being provided to the Golani regime.
Interestingly, Iranian users on Twitter, using hashtags such as “Cocaine Juice King,” have called him “Cocaine Cabbie” and have ridiculed his history of supporting Reza Pahlavi.
Kambiz Karandish started smuggling this amount of cocaine even though he had claimed on his social media page a few years ago: "The worst part of my job is that after 11 hours of driving, you have to cook!" Users also wrote to him in the comments section: "What was $23 million in cocaine for, Kambiz cocaine? You could have provided for His Majesty's soldiers for two years."
Other users also sarcastically claimed that most people affiliated with the opposition use drugs to foster a sense of subversion, and many of these figures are involved in moral and economic corruption.
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