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Dhabar

The Democratic Palace.

Dhabar is the capital city of Qurac.[1]

History[]

2010[]

 
Dhabar
November 23, 22:11 UTC+2

The Team made their way to the Democratic Palace to stop Queen Bee's plan to take over Qurac. They freed Rumaan Harjavti from Psimon's thrall, and Miss Martian defeated her old foe. She then impersonated Queen Bee to defame the monarch with press nearby.[1]

 
Dhabar
December 1, 21:12 UTC+2

Clark Kent and Jimmy Olsen arrived in Dhabar to cover Rumaan Harjavti's impeachment hearings, unaware of a nearby assassin making his next target.[2]

 
Dhabar
December 1, 21:16 UTC+2

The assassin fired a missile at the podium, meant to distract any heroes trying to interfere. When Superman and Miss Martian were occupied, he fired a shot from his wrist-mounted gun at Harjavti.[3]

 
Dhabar
December 1, 21:18 UTC+2

Sumaan Harjavti pushed his brother aside, taking the bullet in the shoulder. The heroes confront the assassin, Deadshot. Superboy, fueled by a shield, beats Deadshot to within an inch of his life.[4]

 
Dhabar
December 1, 21:21 UTC+2

Miss Martian and Superman discussed Superboy's behavior. Superman turned Deadshot over to authorities.[4]

2013[]

 
Dhabar
November 26, 23:19 UTC

Cheshire and Red Arrow stayed in Qurac's capital briefly after chaperoning a shipment of LexCorp drilling equipment to Bialya.[5]

2016-2018[]

Queen Bee launched a full-scale invasion of Qurac, which saw fighting in the capital using both conventional forces and meta-humans such as Mammoth. Qurac was annexed, and many Quracis, including Gabrielle Daou, fled the country.[6]

2019[]

 
Dhabar
January 02, 15:17 UTC+2

Halo visited Gabrielle Daou's mother Madia and cousin Samad, initially pretending to be Gabrielle, to give them closure on Gabrielle's disappearance.[7]

Madia and Samad were later granted US visas, and had moved to Happy Harbor by April 2020.[8]

Sightings[]

Background information[]

  • In the comics, Dhabar was not the capital of Qurac, but a nearby country that was also war-torn. Writer Chuck Dixon used it in several of his comics, but most notably as the home nation of Tim Drake's school friend Ali Ben-Khadir.

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Dubuc, Nicole (writer) & Oliva, Jay (director) (March 17, 2012). "Image". Young Justice. Season 1. Episode 21. Cartoon Network.
  2. Weisman, Greg (w). Jones, Christopher (a). Atkinson, Zac (col). Abbott, Wes (let). Gaydos, Sarah (ed). "Players, Chapter Four: Do Not Pass Go" Young Justice 23 (December 19, 2012), New York, NY: DC Comics
  3. Weisman, Greg (w). Jones, Christopher (a). Atkinson, Zac (col). Abbott, Wes (let). Gaydos, Sarah (ed). "Players, Chapter Five: Milburn, Edgar and Jake" Young Justice 24 (January 23, 2013), New York, NY: DC Comics
  4. 4.0 4.1 Weisman, Greg (w). Jones, Christopher (a). Atkinson, Zac (col). Abbott, Wes (let). Gaydos, Sarah (ed). "Players, Chapter Six: Rolling Doubles" Young Justice 25 (February 20, 2013), New York, NY: DC Comics
  5. Scott, Sharon, Brandon Vietti, Greg Weisman (writers), Young Justice: Legacy (November 19, 2013): Red Arrow journal #5. Santa Ana, CA: Little Orbit
  6. Vogel, Michael (writer) & Heuck, Vinton (director) (January 11, 2019). "Private Security". Young Justice. Season 3. Episode 4. DC Universe.
  7. Weisman, Greg (writer) & Zwyer, Mel (director) (July 30, 2019). "Quiet Conversations". Young Justice. Season 3. Episode 20. DC Universe.
  8. Catt, Mae (writer) & Heuck, Vinton (director) (March 31, 2022). "Nautical Twilight". Young Justice. Season 4. Episode 14. HBO Max.
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