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Great White North
Sex assault charges for Khadr family member
2010-06-15
The partially paralyzed son of the late Canadian al-Qaeda associate Ahmed Said Khadr has been arrested in Toronto for alleged sexual exploitation of a minor.
Canada's favourite terrorist family.
Abdulkareem Ahmed Khadr, 21, was arrested 10 days ago by Toronto Police and is scheduled to appear before the Ontario Court of Justice on July 15. "He has been charged with sexual assault and sexual exploitation," Constable Tony Vella, a police spokesman, said on Monday. The alleged victim was a minor but is now 18 years of age, Const. Vella said.

Reached at the family apartment on Monday, Mr. Khadr said: "Don't worry about it. I'm pretty sure the law is going to do what it's supposed to do."

The arrest is the latest chapter in the saga of the Khadrs, Canadian citizens who once lived in the same compound as Osama bin Laden but fled Afghanistan after the fall of the Taliban in 2001.

The family patriarch, Amhed Khadr, crossed into Pakistan, where he was killed in a shootout with Pakistani security forces in 2003. His son Omar is at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, accused of killing a U.S. soldier.

Another son, Abdullah, is in Toronto awaiting extradition to the United States, where he has been charged with smuggling weapons to the Taliban and al-Qaeda, while son Abdurahman has said his father tried to recruit him to become a suicide bomber.
Was Abdurahman the favourite son or the disliked one?
The fifth of six Khadr children, Abdulkareem, who was born in Pakistan, was present when his father was killed near the Afghanistan border. Then 14, Abdulkareem took a bullet to the spine and is paralyzed from the waist down.

He returned to Toronto in 2004 using an emergency passport issued by the Canadian government.

At the time, Stockwell Day, then an opposition MP and now International Trade Minister, said the Khadrs had lost the right to call themselves Canadians. "They've expressed their allegiance to the principles of al-Qaeda and Osama bin Laden," Mr. Day said. "That alone should be grounds to have their citizenship revoked."
You'd think so, wouldn't you?
The mother denies the family has ties to al-Qaeda. In 2006, Abdulkareem turned up in Brampton to watch bail hearings for the Toronto 18 terror suspects who were charged with plotting truck bomb attacks in southern Ontario.

Two years later, he took part in a protest outside the United States consulate in Toronto to call for the release of his brother Omar. On Monday, Abdulkareem said he was arrested at a police station in suburban Scarborough on June 4. "I went to go see what they were talking about, talk to them and that's it," he said. "They gave me the papers and whatnot and that's it, they let me go."

Mr. Khadr said he was unsure whether he would have to appear in court next month. "I might not need to appear, I might need to appear, it doesn't matter," he said. Asked if he meant the case might be resolved or the charges dropped before that date, he said, "yes."
If she's muslim, then her family will insist on dropping charges. the Khadrs are practically royalty in the islamist world. Still, he's a smug little sh*t, isn't he?
His sister Zaynab said she was unaware of any charges. "He hasn't been charged with anything. If there was any charges believe me I'd know about it," she said on Monday. "I don't know about any of that and believe me, I would have known, I have a minor in the house."
apples. oranges.
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Afghanistan
Taleban-style laws give more rights to women than even Britain or the US
2009-04-03
As much as I'd like to help the average, ordinary people of Afghanistan, I have my limits, and Karzai is seriously testing them. Perhaps it's time for the north and west of that country to secede and let the Pashtuns sink on their own.
President Karzai of Afghanistan provoked international outrage yesterday with draconian Taleban-era restrictions on women and laws that explicitly sanction marital rape.

A leaked copy of the laws obtained by The Times details new strictures for Afghanistan's Shia minority. Women are banned from leaving the home without permission. A wife has the absolute duty to provide sexual services to her husband, and child marriage is legalised.

Details of the legislation emerged as President Obama and other world leaders wrapped up the G20 summit to fly to a Nato summit marking 60 years of the alliance. Mr Obama is pushing for an increase in Nato troop numbers in Afghanistan, but many allies have already rebuffed his calls. The new laws may provide an excuse for remaining waverers to join them.

Canada, which is the third largest contributor of forces to the Nato mission in Afghanistan, has already warned that it may rethink its troop contribution if the law was not repealed.

Opponents of the Afghan President accused him of selling out basic human rights for women in return for the votes of hardline Shia conservatives for the presidential election in August. Although the Shia minority, which comprises 20 per cent of the population, is considered religiously moderate, their political leaders are conservative. Community leaders are relied on to deliver their people's votes and women are presumed to vote in accordance with their husband.

International reaction has been slowed by secrecy surrounding the law, which was passed without a formal debate and signed off by President Karzai this week, but is yet to be made law.

Hillary Clinton, the US Secretary of State, became aware of it only when it was raised by her Finnish counterpart at the Afghanistan conference in The Hague on Wednesday. She is said to have raised the issue with him but without the full text President Karzai was spared her opprobrium.

Stephen Harper, the Canadian Prime Minister, said he was troubled by the law and would lobby other leaders to support him in seeking to have it repealed. "This is antithetical to our mission in Afghanistan," he said. Stockwell Day, the Canadian Trade Minister, who is chairman of the Cabinet committee on Afghanistan, warned that if Kabul did not back down Canadian support for the Government could be imperilled. "If there is any wavering on this point, this will create serious difficulties, serious problems for the Government of Canada," he told reporters in Ottawa.

Canada has 2,800 troops fighting in southern Afghanistan and has suffered the highest relative number of casualties of any contingent with 116 of its soldiers dead. Britain, with 8,000 troops, has lost 152 in Afghanistan.

Mike Gapes, the chairman of the Foreign Affairs Select Committee, called the law deplorable. "We did not go into Afghanistan to remove the Taleban only to have Taleban-style policies reimplemented by the Government," he said. "But this raises big question marks about the nature of the Afghan Government."

The Afghan Government refused to comment until Saturday, which is after the Nato summit. Speaking yesterday both Mrs Clinton and General James Jones, Mr Obama's national security adviser, denied that they had given up on getting more Nato soldiers for the fight against a Taleban insurgency in Afghanistan.

The legislation is based on the Shia family code first brought before Parliament two years ago, to the horror of women legislators who make up more than a quarter of the assembly. Under the same constitution, each religious group is to have its own family law. Opponents said that it contravenes the founding charter in many ways -- not least Article 22, which enshrines equality of the sexes before the law.

One of the most controversial articles stipulates that the wife "is bound to preen for her husband as and when he desires".

Later it explicitly sanctions marital rape. "As long as the husband is not travelling, he has the right to have sexual intercourse with his wife every fourth night,"

Article 132 says. "Unless the wife is ill or has any kind of illness that intercourse could aggravate, the wife is bound to give a positive response to the sexual desires of her husband."
How old were the 'men' who wrote this?
Article 133 reintroduces the Taleban restrictions on women's movements outside their homes, stating: "A wife cannot leave the house without the permission of the husband" unless in a medical or other emergency.

Article 27 endorses child marriage with girls legally able to marry once they begin to menstruate.

Sayed Hossain Alemi Balkhi, a Shia lawmaker involved in drafting the law, defended the legislation, saying that it gives more rights to women than even Britain or the US does.
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Great White North
Accused terrorist secured Canadian visa
2008-04-25
An accused terrorist with ties to al-Qaeda was able to secure a visa before being arrested at Pearson International Airport in Toronto, Radio-Canada reported Thursday night.

According to a secret document sent to Stockwell Day from the Canada Border Services Agency last July, the minister of public safety was told a man of Pakistani descent obtained a visa to temporarily live in Canada from the High Commissioner in London.

According to the note, the man, whose identity is not revealed, is a suspected terrorist implicated in al-Qaeda's mass destruction weapons program.

On July 12, 2007, agents from the CBSA arrested the man who'd arrived from Newcastle, England. While verifying his passport, agents were able to ascertain he'd been flagged by Canadian authorities.

The man was interrogated by customs agents and then requested to be returned to England while renouncing his visa, but the pilot would not let him on the plane.

The man spent a night in a detention in centre in Toronto before he was deported back to Manchester, England the following day. Authorities in Great Britain were told the man was being deported back to their country, but it is unclear where he is now.

The note, obtained by Radio-Canada, does not indicate whether the RCMP or the Canadian Security Intelligence Service agents also interrogated the individual.
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Arabia
Saudi Arabian court orders jail, lashes for Canadian teen
2008-04-06
A court in Saudi Arabia has reportedly sentenced a Canadian teenager to spend one year in prison and receive 200 lashes for his involvement in a schoolyard brawl that left a man dead. Mahmoud Al-Ken, a reporter for a Montreal Arabic radio station, said the family of 17-year-old Sultan Kohail told him the teen had been sentenced on Saturday. In a prior ruling handed down March 3, Kohail's 23-year-old brother, Mohamed, was sentenced to death by beheading for the same incident.

The Kohails have maintained that they're both innocent. Their family says Mohamed Kohail didn't get a fair trial, with the entire case consisting of 10 brief court hearings totalling about 90 minutes. Also, the court refused to hear any defence witnesses, the family maintains. Earlier this week, Mohamed's lawyer was kicked out of court after he tabled documents for the 23-year-old's appeal. The judges, the same ones who sentenced Mohamed, also threatened to revoke the lawyer's licence.

Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day's department has urged Saudi authorities to overturn the death sentence. Sultan and Mohamed Kohail were detained in January 2007 after a brawl in which an 18-year-old Syrian student died of internal injuries. A third accused, a Jordanian national, has also been sentenced to death.

The fight apparently began when one of the men claimed Sultan had insulted a girl. "I didn't even talk to the girl," Sultan insisted Thursday in an interview with the Canadian Press. He said he was surrounded by a gang of almost a dozen men as he left school that day and that one of them tried to beat him on the head with a stick.

The Kohail family immigrated to Canada from Saudi Arabia in 2000 and had been living in the Montreal suburb of Dollard des Ormeaux before they moved back to their homeland temporarily in 2006.
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Great White North
Secret files against terror suspects revealed
2008-02-24
The case against a group of Canadians sometimes referred to as "the Secret Trial Five" isn't as secret as it used to be. Ottawa unveiled more specific allegations against the five terrorism suspects yesterday: for example, that one suspect called the satellite phone of al-Qaeda's second-in-command, and that another was in charge of a group of training camp recruits in Afghanistan.

In hundreds of pages of court documents yesterday, Canadian ministers signed new security certificates against alleged members of the al-Qaeda network. In doing so, the government narrowly beat a date imposed by the Supreme Court for the previous certificates to expire.

A Supreme Court ruling last year forced the federal government to relaunch its security certificate power. The controversial measure is intended to be used to jail and deport Canada's most dangerous non-citizens through court proceedings where the defendants are not allowed to hear all of the evidence against them.

The new process will still involve some court hearings the suspects can't attend, but to make the process fairer and more constitutional, the government yesterday appointed 13 "special advocate" lawyers to represent the suspects.

Federal Court judges have already ruled that the five suspects are likely threats who, for the most part, lied in court about their travels and associates. One suspect remains jailed while the rest are under strict house arrest. Fears that the suspects would be tortured abroad continue to stymie efforts to deport them.

Government officials did not say yesterday why they are now revealing more about the allegations against the men. Among the details the government apparently kept up its sleeve for years:

Syrian Hassan Almrei, accused of document forgery, is alleged to have gained access to a restricted area at Toronto's Pearson Airport in September, 1999. "Almrei and the five individuals appeared to have access cards and codes for a restricted access building on the [Pearson] grounds," the documents state.

Egyptian Mahmoud Jaballah, long alleged to be a communications conduit for terrorist cells involved in the 1998 African embassy bombings, is said to have "communicated closely" with Ayman al-Zawahiri, the al-Qaeda No. 2. The new documents indicate that conversations Mr. Jaballah had in Canada were recorded, including ones in which he referred to Mr. al-Zawahiri as "the father" and dialled his satellite phone.

A Moroccan, Adil Charkaoui, is said to have admitted to CSIS that fellow Montrealer Abderraouf Hannachi - who sent the so-called millennium bomber, Ahmed Ressam, to Afghan training camps - sent him there too. The court documents say that Mr. Charkaoui didn't just attend a terrorist training camp but was also in charge of recruits.

An Egyptian who has admitted working for Osama bin Laden in Africa, Mohamed Zeki Mahjoub, was allegedly fingered as a high-level terrorist by another Egyptian security certificate detainee, Mr. Jaballah. "On Nov. 16, 1996, Jaballah disclosed that he and Mahjoub once worked alongside each other 'over there.' And that he [Jaballah] regards Mahjoub as a shrewd and manipulative individual."

An alleged Algerian sleeper agent, Mohamed Harkat, is said to have been overheard making ominous remarks. "In February, 1998, Harkat stated that he had to keep a 'low profile' as he needed status in Canada. Further Harkat said that as soon as he received his 'status' he would be 'ready,' which the (Crown) concludes meant that Harkat would be prepared to undertake a jihad in support of Islamic terrorism."

The charge sheets make no reference to earlier allegations made by Abu Zubaydah, a Guantanamo Bay detainee, who was recently revealed to have been interrogated by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency using harsh methods.

Compared with the earlier cases, the charge sheets filed yesterday include more references to Canadian Security Intelligence Service spy methods, including telecommunications intercepts.

The government also announced yesterday that a sixth man, who was being held as an alleged Tamil Tiger terrorist, will no longer be subject to a security certificate. "The government of Canada has decided not to reissue a security certificate to [Manickavasagam] Suresh at this point," Mélisa Leclerc, a spokeswoman for Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day, said in a statement. She said the government is eyeing other legal measures.

Last year, Mr. Charkaoui's name was affixed to a Supreme Court ruling that parts of the old security certificate regime violated the Charter of Rights. The court gave the government one year to fix the law. Yesterday was the last working day before the court deadline.

The 13 "special advocates" that the new law created include many veterans of judicial inquiries who've fought government secrecy.
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Great White North
Prisoner abuse allegations dismissed
2007-04-25
The Conservative government cast tales of prisoner abuse in Afghanistan as the unsubstantiated ramblings of a few cold-blooded Taliban killers. Detainees have reportedly been kicked in the head, whipped with cables, slammed with rifle butts, or electrocuted by Afghan authorities after being turned over by their Canadian captors. Several of the prisoners have been cleared and released, and some have spent months awaiting formal charges, according to a report in the Globe and Mail.

But Prime Minister Stephen Harper accused his opponents of siding with terrorists when they raised the alleged beatings in the House of Commons. "These are merely allegations being made by the Taliban," the prime minister said in French. "I don't accept allegations without evidence from the Taliban."

The Liberals said the government's own words place it in violation of the Geneva Conventions, which require a presumption of innocence for charged captives. A handful of detainees told the Globe and Mail that they were treated humanely by Canadian soldiers upon their capture. But it was a different story once they were transferred to Afghan authorities. One was quoted saying that a particularly fearsome interrogator nicknamed 'Bobo,' Afghan slang for a B-52 bomber, kicked him in the head and warned him as he bled not to dirty the carpet.

Public Security Minister Stockwell Day cast the Canadian prisoners as "so-called detainees" who are cold-blooded killers. He said humane treatment of prisoners is a radical thought to some people in Afghanistan, and that Canadians have a message for local authorities when transferring over prisoners.

"We're saying to them that these people that we're bringing you to put in jail -- these people have no compunction about machine-gunning, mowing down little children," Day told an international counter-terrorism conference in Quebec City. "They have no compunction about decapitating or hanging elderly women. . . . Now we've captured them and, yes, these people that we've captured want nothing more to do than to kill you and your children."
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Arabia
Soddy Qaeda group threatens all world's oil producers
2007-02-15
A Saudi wing of al Qaeda called for attacks on suppliers of oil to the United States around the world, saying targets should not be limited to the Middle East and listing Canada, Venezuela and Mexico as under threat. The threat appeared in the al Qaeda Organization in the Arabian Peninsula's e-magazine, Sawt al-Jihad (Voice of Holy War), which was posted on a Web site used by Islamist militants.

"It is necessary to hit oil interests in all regions which serve the United States, not just in the Middle East. The goal is to cut its supplies or reduce them through any means," it said. The group was behind a failed February 2006 attack on the world's largest oil processing plant, the Abqaiq facility in Saudi Arabia. "Targeting oil interests includes production wells, export pipelines, oil terminals and tankers and that can reduce U.S. oil inventory, forcing it to take decisions it has been avoiding for a long time and confuse and strangle its economy," it said.

"It is necessary to hit oil interests in all regions which serve the United States, not just in the Middle East"
Officials and regulators in Canada's oil and gas sector said they were taking the threat seriously but had not raised security levels. "We've always said that we're not immune to possibilities of terrorism," Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day said. Canada is the biggest exporter of crude oil to the United States, followed by Mexico, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela.

Mexico said its crude oil installations were safe and there was no immediate plan to step up security. President Felipe Calderon's office said it was evaluating the threat. The country, which ships about 1.4 million barrels a day of crude to the United States, tightened security around its Gulf of Mexico oil rigs in 2005 in line with international norms, a spokeswoman at state-run oil monopoly Pemex said.

Venezuela said it was prepared to investigate the threat. "The Venezuelan state's intelligence apparatus is ready to launch any investigation in order to guarantee the operation of our strategic resources ... with a view to ensuring any early warning," Venezuelan Interior Minister Pedro Carreno told reporters.

The militant group also vowed new attacks in Saudi Arabia.

"For some time now, we have been preparing some quality attacks which will shake the foundations of the crusaders (Westerners) in the Arabian Peninsula," said the magazine, reappearing after a nearly two-year absence following a Saudi clampdown. "And we tell our leader Sheikh Osama bin Laden that we miss him terribly and we are proceeding on the road (of Jihad) ... your soldiers in the Arabian Peninsula are working to prepare for what would please you and the believers," the magazine said in another article.

The issue, dedicated to the theme "Bin Laden and the Oil Weapon," also carried operational details of the attack on the Abqaiq facility and an interview with a militant who said he had taken part in the raid. Al Qaeda leaders have repeatedly called for attacks on oil installations to block supplies to punish the West for what they see as a U.S.-led war against Islam. In 2003, al Qaeda militants launched a violent campaign to topple the U.S.-allied Saudi royal family with suicide attacks on compounds housing Westerners and on government buildings.

(Additional reporting by Jeffrey Jones, David Ljunggren and Randall Palmer in Canada, Saul Hudson in Caracas and Catherine Bremer in Mexico City)
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Home Front Economy
Canadian, U.S. and Mexican officials held secretive meeting on integration
2007-02-13
Canadian, U.S. and Mexican politicians discussed using "stealth" to overcome public resistance to the integration of the three countries at a confidential meeting last year, according to documents just released under U.S. Freedom of Information laws.

Top military brass, corporate executives and diplomats also attended the meeting in Banff, Alta., where participants discussed everything from the harmonization of food and drug standards, to common immigration policies, and the pooling of energy resources.

The secret guest list of the North American Forum included then-U.S. secretary of defence Donald Rumsfeld, Canadian Chief of Defence Staff Gen. Rick Hillier, Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day, Pengrowth Corp. CEO James Kinnear and Lockheed Martin executive Ron Covais.

Presentation outlines for the forum acknowledge that the concept of North American integration - which some call a "North American Union" - is unpopular, and note that it might be tough to sell as a concept.

"While a vision is appealing, working on the infrastructure might yield more benefit and bring more people on board ('evolution by stealth')," the notes said.

"Evolution by stealth" means using regulatory changes, such as food- and drug-safety benchmarks, which don't require parliamentary approval, to lay the infrastructure for North American integration. This allows for change with little or no public debate, critics say.

Media were excluded from the September forum, and Day, who gave a speech at the event, declined to reveal the contents of his talk.

"It was meant as a private meeting," said Melisa Leclerc, a spokeswoman from Day's office, although she conceded he attended "in his capacity as minister for public security."

"It is not encouraging to see the phrase 'evolution by stealth' in reference to important policy debates such as North American integration," said Tom Fitton, president of Judicial Watch, a Washington-based conservative watchdog group that obtained the documents last week.

But, former finance minister John Manley, who attended the meeting, said the forum was "not part of a nefarious plan to yield sovereignty to the U.S. .... It was just some informed private citizens and government officials having a conversation" on how best to co-operate to ensure their citizens enjoyed a safe and prosperous future.

In fact, he said, Canada comes out stronger than ever from such meetings, which force "some senior American officials to think about Canada for a few days."

However, Maude Barlow of the Council of Canadians said the reference to stealth is "a very telling and important statement."

Many of the politicians who attended the forum have been pursuing "integration by stealth" for the past two years, she said, pointing to a little-known but top-priority agreement called the Security and Prosperity Partnership.

The accord, kickstarted by U.S. President George W. Bush, then-prime minister Paul Martin and former Mexican president Vicente Fox at a 2005 meeting in Waco, Texas, is designed to streamline everything from food and drug safety standards to counter-terrorism measures.

Government officials from the three countries are expected to meet in Ottawa later this month. However, Foreign Affairs spokespeople said they did not yet know when it would be held or who would attend.

The partnership's stated goal is to protect North America from security threats such as terrorism and flu pandemics as well as economic threats from new global-market giants such as China.

Many of the accord's measures are not contentious, such as plans to improve water quality, reduce sulphur in fuels, and co-ordinate efforts to fight pandemics and avian flu. But it also covers a host of hot-button issues such as plans to enhance data-sharing on high-risk travellers, revamp safety and environmental regulations, centralize the assessment of new chemicals and rework food safety standards.

Most of the 300 policy recommendations within the accord may not require legislative changes, the Council of Canadians said.
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Great White North
Russian spy to be expelled from Canada
2006-12-05
Hat tip Drudge.
A suspected Russian spy who obtained a Canadian passport thanks to a well-made fake birth certificate, is to be deported, a Canadian judge ruled. Canadian authorities arrested the man who calls himself Paul William Hampel on November 14 in Montreal, accusing him of being a Russian spy working under a false Canadian identity.

According prosecutors, the man had obtained a Canadian passport three times on the basis of his fake birth certificate A summary of evidence released by a federal court said the suspect was an "elite Russian intelligence officer" who masqueraded as a Canadian citizen to gather information "for over a decade both within Canada and abroad."
Good field craft.
Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day and Immigration Minister Monte Solberg authorized his arrest by issuing a security certificate. The rarely used procedure, launched in 1978, allows authorities to arrest and expel a foreigner deemed a threat to Canadian security. The certificate used to arrest Hampel was the first issued under the Conservative government led by Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
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Great White North
Government arrests man in Montreal suspected of spying
2006-11-16
The Canadian government has made its first espionage arrest in more than a decade — launching a highly sensitive case against a suspected foreign spy who was arrested in a Montreal airport Tuesday evening.

The man is being held under a security-certificate, a federal-government procedure that allows for the arrest of an immigrant whom two cabinet ministers deem a threat to national security. The process allows for the prisoner to be jailed until he or she is deported. And portions of the case may be forever shielded from the public, and even the defendant.

“The government's most important duty is to ensure the security of all Canadians. A security certificate has been issued under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act against a foreign national,” said Melisa Leclerc, a spokeswoman for Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day, wrote in an e-mail to The Globe and Mail.

“He is now in custody in Montreal. More information will become available as the Federal Court process unfolds.”

She would not speak to man's identity, but another government official has identified the suspect as an individual who was “alleging to be a Canadian citizen named Paul William Hampel.”

Security certificates are a power rarely invoked by the Canadian government, which has used the process less than 30 times in the last 20 years.

Terrorism cases have preoccupied the Canadian Security Intelligence Service in recent years. Yet espionage remains a big concern; as of last year, CSIS was trying to keeps tabs on 152 potential spies from more than 30 rival agencies.

Canadian experts have long singled out China and Russia as areas of concern in terms of foreign espionage, both during and after the Cold War. “For all of the changes that Russia underwent ... its intelligence practises remain essentially unchanged,” said Wesley Wark, a professor at the University of Toronto and president of the Canadian Association for Security and Intelligence Studies.

“Canada was always a favourite target for a number of reasons,” Mr. Wark said.

The country has long been regarded as a potential secondhand source for secrets concerning the United States and allied agencies, such as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. And high-tech corporations in Canada also represent potential targets for corporate espionage.

In 1945, Soviet Embassy cypher clerk Igor Gouzenko sought refuge with the RCMP, taking with him papers that implicated several Canadians and British scientists in a Soviet plot to steal atomic secrets. The Gouzenko papers helped convict a dozen Canadian spies, including a member of Parliament.
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Fifth Column
Canuck Muslim groups seek summit
2006-06-09
Muslim leaders pleaded for help Thursday in their struggle against extremists in their midst, saying they can't fight a small minority of radicals alone. "We're not here to say we don't have an issue," said social worker Shahina Siddiqui, president of the Islamic Social Services Association. "Of course we have an issue," she told a news conference on Parliament Hill. "But we can't deal with it ourselves. We're part of the Canadian society and so we demand that the Canadian society come forward, help us root out this."
Demand? Awfully cheeky, eh?
Her group joined the Canadian Council on American-Islamic Relations, the Canadian Muslim Civil Liberties Association and several other agencies pushing for a related summit by the end of June. They hope the meeting would bring together Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty, Toronto Mayor David Miller and a host of community and youth groups. The Ontario government and Miller's office were quick to say they would take part. There was no immediate response from Harper's office, but Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day has asked the Muslim groups for more details.
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Great White North
Security experts advise deporting radical clerics
2006-06-08
Security experts are urging the federal government to crack down on Islamic extremists who may be preaching hatred in Canada's mosques, following the stunning arrest of 17 Toronto residents on terrorism-related charges. "That is, not allowing extremists to come here so easily, and asking those who are preaching extremism to get out of here -- making sure they are removed," Martin Collacott, an immigration analyst, told CTV News.

The Conservative government is looking into the possibility, said Immigration Minister Monte Solberg. Such a change would bring Canada's system in line with American and British immigration laws, which allow for the swift deportation of radicals who incite hatred or glorify terrorism. The British law was changed after the London suicide bomb attacks last July that killed 52 people.

However, many Muslim leaders argue that such a proposal unfairly targets them, and that there is no evidence any imams are preaching violence. "Do any of our imams teach terrorism at the mosques?" questioned Imam Salam Elmenyawi of the Muslim Council of Montreal. "Is there any proof that there is an imam doing such work?"

At the mosque where five of the suspects prayed, Imam Aly Hindi denied teaching them any form of hatred or extremism. "We are not radicalizing anybody," he said. "Mosques are used as places of worship, but also we cannot speak only of how to pray -- we speak about current affairs from time to time when drastic things happen. We speak out. This is our right as Canadian citizens."

Hindi, who also opined that the government did not seem to have a strong case against the suspects, said it is the duty of imams to raise the standard of morality in Canada. He argued that sometimes imams must talk about major current events, including debating foreign policy and other issues, but that this is not the same as trying to overthrow the system.

But a report released Wednesday by the Asia Pacific Foundation, an international policy assessment group, said Canada needs to be aware of radicals recruiting young men who feel alienated. "The foiled plot has raised questions in Canada about the threat that exists from within its own society," the report said.

Another concern is people traveling to Pakistan to learn from extremists, the group warned. Mohammad Momin Khawaja, the first person charged under Canada's Anti-Terrorist Act, spent several months in Pakistan. However, it's unknown whether he spent any time with extremists. Khawaja was arrested in Ottawa in March 2004, and has pleaded not guilty to the charges against him.

Meanwhile, officials are also concerned about radicals surfing the Internet for material that incites hatred, and finding others who share their fanaticism. Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day said the Toronto group may have found inspiration on the Internet for their alleged bomb plot. "Some were born here, some were not and we are facing an international phenomenon in terms of people availing themselves of information on the Internet to fuel their own extremist ideology," said Day.
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