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Great White North
Quebec Woman Faces Terrorism Charge over Alleged Link to Hizbullah
2012-07-15
[An Nahar] A Lebanese woman in Quebec, who has been accused of supplying weapons parts to Leb, is now facing a terrorism charge, the national news agency, The Canadian Press, said.

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) said Friday the charge follows an investigation that alleges Mouna Diab committed offences for the benefit of a contact linked to Hizbullah which is considered a terrorist organization in Canada.

Diab 26, was jugged
Drop the rosco and step away witcher hands up!
in May last year at Montreal's international airport for allegedly trying to smuggle parts for an AR-15 rifle in her suitcase and was later charged with illegally exporting weapons to Leb.

An in-depth investigation brought about the new charge that carries up to a maximum of life in prison for committing an offence for a terrorist group.

The RCMP said Diab was allegedly shipping parts through other Lebanese community members, although those people were unaware of what they were carrying, said the Canadian Press.

"It is alleged that Diab was acting under the direction of a contact person in Leb who is associated with Hizbullah," the RCMP said in a statement.
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Great White North
Terror charge for Quebec Muslim activist in Hezbollah gun-running plot
2012-07-14
A Muslim activist from Quebec was charged with supporting terrorism on Friday after an RCMP investigation linked her to an alleged plot to smuggle weapons to Hezbollah in Lebanon.

Mouna Diab was charged with committing a crime "for the benefit of, at the direction of, or in association with a terrorist group," according to the RCMP in a statement. She faces a possible life sentence if convicted.

She was arrested at Montreal's Trudeau airport last year and accused of violating an international arms embargo targeting Lebanon but, on Friday, police added the far more serious terrorism charge.

The case marks the first time Canada has laid charges in connection with Hezbollah, and comes amid worries Tehran would unleash the Iranian-sponsored terrorist group in the event of an attack on its nuclear program.
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Great White North
Quebec woman charged with trying to send arms parts to Lebanon
2011-10-22
Mouna Diab was once in a Quebec youth group fighting discrimination against Muslims, but the outspoken 26-year-old activist had little to say this week after appearing in a Montreal courtroom to face a charge alleging she had violated an arms embargo that prohibits the export of weapons to Lebanon. She pleaded not guilty on Thursday and returns to court Nov. 10.

Diab was arrested at Montreal’s Trudeau airport on May 19 as she was departing for Beirut. In her luggage, investigators allegedly found AR-15 assault rifle parts. Other parts were allegedly shipped separately.

Police said the components could have been assembled into working firearms. An RCMP spokesman said, "If you put all the pieces together you could build or make two weapons with it."

Criminal charges against UN sanctions violators are rare in Canada, but not unprecedented. Last year, Mahmoud Yadegari of Toronto was sentenced to three years for trying to ship nuclear-related items to Iran.

The charges against Ms. Diab do not specify any intended recipient of the gun parts, nor would police elaborate. It is not apparent why anyone would take such a risk when Iran and Syria already keep their Lebanese allies armed to the teeth.

Diab's arrest has drawn attention to her activism. The website of the Montreal-based association des jeunes libanais musulmans, or Association of Young Lebanese Muslims, listed her as vice-president in 2007.

At the time, the website was linked to the sites of several anti-Western Shiite clerics, including Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader of Iran, and the Iranian hardliner Mesbah Yazdi. It also linked to the late Lebanese cleric Mohammad Fadlallah’s website, which says it is "obligatory to wage war" against Israel and that making peace with Israelis is "not permissible." Muslims in "occupied land" must provide "material or moral support" to fighters, according to the cleric’s website.

In August 2006 the association signed a statement denouncing Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s position on the war that had erupted when Hezbollah attacked an Israel military convoy across Lebanon’s southern border.

The following February, Diab was part of a delegation that went to the town of Hérouxville to try to counter stereotypes about Muslims. The town had passed a code of conduct directed at immigrants that banned stoning, female genital mutilation and head coverings, among other things. Diab told La Presse that she found the code hurtful.

Later that year, she was quoted in a Le Devoir article about speaking to a cousin in Lebanon who was hiding from Israeli planes. She was quoted as saying, "It is difficult to present yourself differently when you are being attacked and the only ones defending you are members of Hezbollah. So you identify with Hezbollah, it’s normal."
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