Sultan bin Sulayem’s ties to Epstein raise troubling questions about his role in child trafficking networks
Public attention around the Jeffrey Epstein files has largely focused on politicians, academics or members of royalty. Yet one of the most critical figures appearing in the files is neither a senator nor an aristocrat. He is a logistics operator.
His name is Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem. As the CEO of DP World, one of the world’s largest port and container operators, he oversees the physical backbone of global trade. As is well known, goods, weapons, raw materials, humanitarian aid and the invisible cargo of inter-state commerce all pass through this sector. Precisely for this reason, bin Sulayem’s appearance in Jeffrey Epstein’s correspondence cannot be dismissed as a casual acquaintance.
In a 2009 email sent by Epstein, the line "Where are you, are you okay? I loved the torture video” stands out as one of the darkest sentences in the files. The recipient of this message, whose name appeared for a long time in heavily redacted U.S. Department of Justice records, is identified as bin Sulayem. This is not a social-media rumor. It appears in official documents. What this "torture video” refers to, whom it involved, and under what circumstances it was produced have never been disclosed. But considering that the sender was Epstein – globally infamous for child trafficking and sexual abuse – this is clearly a matter that warrants serious investigation.
Bin Sulayem is not a banker or a financial speculator, but he is a container magnate. This raises an unavoidable question: Why would a figure like Epstein maintain frequent and intimate contact with the head of one of the world’s largest logistics networks? Because logistics is not merely transportation. It is a strategic domain that determines who moves what, from where to where, and through which levels of oversight.
Containers are sealed, their contents often exist only on paper, and the global system prefers not to look too closely inside them. When one considers that Epstein’s world involved not only money but also the trafficking of human beings, every question asked becomes legitimate.
It is also striking that bin Sulayem has another publicly promoted identity. He is listed as a UNICEF donor and presents himself as a supporter of humanitarian projects focused on children. Should we not be suspicious of a figure who is simultaneously portrayed as a respected child-rights philanthropist while maintaining correspondence with someone at the center of a global child-abuse network? Should we pretend not to know that personal philanthropy often functions as a shield of immunity for global elites?
Let me translate one more Epstein email addressed to bin Sulayem and leave the interpretation to you: "The Moldovan and the Ukrainian arrived. The Moldovan was a disappointment, but the Ukrainian is very beautiful.”
Many names mentioned in the Epstein files were splashed across headlines and publicly debated. In contrast, the bin Sulayem line has been persistently kept at a low profile, and that is noteworthy. A figure who controls the physical flow of global trade, sits at the center of inter-state logistics, and simultaneously carries a humanitarian aid identity should have been one of the most strategic focal points of the Epstein dossier. Because the issue here is not merely moral deviance; it is about access, circulation, and systems of immunity.
The Epstein files serve as a litmus test for revealing who is questioned and who is quietly protected within the global system. That a logistics tycoon occupies such a central position in this file is no coincidence. Perhaps it is time to ask, out loud: inside the containers that move the world, what else was there that no one wanted to look at?