Ex-bike boss Mouhamed ‘Moudi’ Tajjour threatens Mongol gang after attack

Former Nomads motorcycle boss Moudi Tajjour has issued an ominous threat to his enemies after he was ambushed outside a Gold Coast Bunnings and brutally beaten on camera.

Tajjour was left with a black eye and bruised face after being run over by a group of four men outside the hardware store in Nerang at 12.45pm on Saturday.

While police are still investigating the incident, a 31-year-old man was arrested by the Queensland Organized Crime Gang Unit on Monday afternoon.

The brutal attack prompted Tajjour to announce he was “coming out of retirement”, although he stepped down as Nomads national chairman in 2018.

Late Monday night, audio emerged of Tajjour issuing an ominous threat to the Mongols cycling club.

“This is a message to all Mongolians in Australia. Any state, Melbourne, Sydney, Gold Coast, Adelaide, tell us where? I’ll put the boys everywhere,” Tajjour can be heard saying in a TikTok video that contained the filtered audio.

“Say where you want us to do this.

“I tried to Facetime you to show me where you are, you won’t, you keep rejecting it. You pussy dogs.”

He also accused the rival club of leaking the video, before blaming the attack on another side: the Lucky Thirteens.

“You shit dogs,” says Tajjour.

“I’m out of retirement for you. For you Mongols.”

Tajjour retracts claims of revenge

Hours after declaring he was rejoining the biker gang and seeking revenge, Tajjour changed his tune.

With his TikTok account, where he has amassed 15,000 followers after reinventing himself as a social media personality, Tajjour retracted any intention of rejoining a gang.

He also announced that he would be taking a break from social media to “clear my head of this social media bubble.”

“I have not returned to bicycles. It was a moment of anger and I said emotions (sic). So [please] I know I’m not back to any crew,” she wrote in a graphic that was shared on TikTok around 3 a.m. Tuesday.

In another video shared at the same time, he wrote: “Sorry for all the disappointment regarding the revenge wars. The only revenge will be for you to have a crack at each of them one by one. That’s the period.”

Tajjour also issued a warning to other clubs and criminal gangs to avoid participating in any attacks they would later falsely accuse him of initiating.

“Please let everyone know that I have left this gang life so I want to make it clear to the gangs that are at war with them,” he wrote.

“Don’t bother trying to make moves with them and see that it’s me because now I say my only intention is to get to know them and get along with each one.

“I’ve actually calmed down and the anger is gone. I’m thinking straight now and I want to be clear so no one tries to use me as a way to get (sic) revenge and try to make it look like it’s me.”

Tajjour is the younger brother of current Nomads national chairman Sleiman Tajjour and cousin of Kings Cross identity John Ibrahim.

Tajjour explains the struggle

On Saturday, footage of the brawl between Tajjour and several men was widely shared on social media.

The former motorbike was filmed being hit, kicked and grabbed by several men. At one point, Tajjour was dragged across the floor before a man tore off his shirt.

Recounting the incident in a TikTok video, Tajjour estimates that about eight men attacked him.

When asked why he didn’t try to fight back or “square up”, the former bikie said he was focused on protecting himself and making sure he didn’t hit the concrete which could have caused brain damage.

“If I squared up to him, I would have opened myself up for the other guys to hit me from the side and all that,” Tajjour said.

“It’s different when a guy walks in by himself and you know he’s alone. You square off.

“I’m not stupid, I know how these things go… I got out of it. I’m not that hurt to tell you the truth, so I ended up doing okay.”

Read related topics: Bunnings

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