Posted on 06/04/2006 12:32:10 PM PDT by canuck_conservative
The delivery of three tonnes of ammonium nitrate to a group suspected of plotting terrorist attacks in southern Ontario was part of an undercover police sting operation, the Toronto Star has learned.
The RCMP said yesterday that after investigating the alleged homegrown terrorist cell for months, they had to move quickly Friday night to arrest 12 men and five youths before the group could launch a bomb attack on Canadian soil.
Sources say investigators who had learned of the group's alleged plan to build a bomb were controlling the sale and transport of the massive amount of fertilizer, a key component in creating explosives. Once the deal was done, the RCMP-led anti-terrorism task force moved in for the arrests.
At a news conference yesterday morning, the RCMP displayed a sample of ammonium nitrate and a crude cell phone detonator they say was seized in the massive police sweep when the 17 were taken into custody. However, they made no mention of the police force's involvement in the sale.
"It was their intent to use it for a terrorist attack," said RCMP assistant commissioner Mike McDonell. "If I can put this in context for you, the 1995 bombing of the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City that killed 168 people was completed with only one tonne of ammonium nitrate."
Ammonium nitrate is a popular fertilizer, but when mixed with fuel oil it can create a powerful explosive.
Standing behind McDonell were the chiefs of police from Toronto and Durham, York and Peel regions, as well as officials with the Ontario Provincial Police and the Canadian Security Intelligence Service representing about 400 people involved with the investigation of the group.
"This group posed a real and serious threat," said McDonell, speaking near a table with seized evidence such as a 9-mm Luger handgun, military fatigues and two-way radios. "It had the capacity and intent to carry out these acts."
The suspects were allegedly planning to launch attacks in southern Ontario, but officials would not specify targets. Nor would they say if attacks were considered imminent.
However, they did say the TTC was not a target. Sources told the Star that the Toronto headquarters of Canada's spy agency on Front St., adjacent to the CN Tower, was on the group's alleged list.
The names of the 12 adult suspects now in custody were made public yesterday, but identities of the youths under the age of 18 cannot be released, according to Canadian laws protecting minors. Of the adults, six are from Mississauga; four from Toronto and two were already incarcerated in Kingston on gun smuggling charges.
The charges laid against the men included participating in or contributing to the activity of a terrorist group, including training and recruitment; providing or making available property for terrorist purposes; and the commission of indictable offences, including firearms and explosives offences for the benefit of or in association with a terrorist group.
Charged are Fahim Ahmad, 21; Jahmaal James, 23; Amin Mohamed Durrani, 19; and Steven Vikash Chand, 25, all of Toronto; Zakaria Amara, 20; Asad Ansari, 21; Shareef Abdelhaleen, 30; Ahmad Mustafa Ghany, 21; Saad Khalid, 19; and Qayyum Abdul Jamal, 43, all of Mississauga; and Mohammed Dirie, 22 and Yasin Abdi Mohamed, 24, who are incarcerated in Kingston.
As officials spoke with reporters, the suspects were being loaded into unmarked vehicles at the Ajax-Pickering police station, where they had spent the night. Wearing leg irons and handcuffs, they were taken to a Brampton courtroom in groups of between two and six to appear before a justice of the peace.
Anser Farooq, a lawyer who represents five of the accused, pointed at snipers on the roof of the courthouse and said: "This is ridiculous. They've got soldiers here with guns. This is going to completely change the atmosphere.
"I think (the police) cast their net far too wide," he said, adding his clients are considering suing law enforcement agencies.
The father of one accused, Mohammed Abdelhaleen, spoke outside the courthouse after his son's appearance, saying there is "no validation" to any of the charges against any of the suspects.
"I have no idea what this is," said the distraught father. "I'm sure it's going to come to nothing. We're playing a political game here. I hope the judicial system realizes this."
With quivering lips, the father said he was in "a very bad place right now. The damage is already done."
Around the same time, Karl Nickner of the Canadian Council on American-Islamic Relations issued a statement that he is confident "the justice system will accord these individuals transparency, due process and the presumption of innocence."
"We stand behind our security forces and the Canadian government in their desire to protect Canada," said the executive director. "As Canadian Muslims, we unequivocally condemn terrorism in all of its forms."
It's still unclear how the group of suspects is connected and police yesterday offered few details of its alleged activities. But sources close to the investigation told the Star that the investigation began in2004 when CSIS began monitoring fundamentalist Internet sites and their users.
They later began monitoring a group of young men, and the RCMP launched a criminal investigation. Police allege the group later picked targets and plotted attacks.
Last winter some members of the group, including the teenagers, went to a field north of the city, where they allegedly trained for an attack and made a video imitating warfare.
Sources said some of the younger members forged letters about a bogus school trip to give to their parents so they could attend.
Police said there were no known connections to Al Qaeda or international terrorist organizations, but that the group was homegrown, meaning the suspects were Canadian citizens, or long-time residents and had allegedly become radicalized here.
This type of extremism was blamed for the suicide attacks in London last July which claimed the lives of 52 commuters travelling on the subway and a double-decker bus.
"They appear to have become adherents of a violent ideology inspired by Al Qaeda," said Luc Portelance of CSIS, adding there is no direct link to the network.
John Thompson of the Mackenzie Institute said he has long warned officials about the possibility of homegrown terrorists and what he dubbed the "jihad generation."
"There's been a focus on (recruiting) younger Muslims, especially those who were mostly raised here," said Thompson, who is director of the Toronto-based think tank.
Recruiters, or "ideological conditioners," he said, have been actively seeking members in Toronto-area mosques, community centres and schools since 2002.
Officials have not linked the suspects to terror cells abroad, but Portelance was quick to point out the investigation is ongoing.
Sources say the cases of two men from Georgia, now in custody in the U.S. facing terrorism charges, are connected to alleged members of the Canadian group.
Yesterday, officials offered few details about the suspects or how they met, saying only they come from a "variety of backgrounds" and represented a broad strata, including students, the employed and unemployed.
"It is important to know that this operation in no way reflects negatively on any specific community or ethnocultural group in Canada," said Portelance. "Terrorism is a dangerous ideology, and a global phenomenon. ... Canada is not immune from this ideology."
When asked why Canadians would want to attack targets in Canada, Portelance said: "Clearly, they're motivated by some of the things we see around the world," he said.
"They're against the Western influences in Islamic countries and have an adherence to violence to reach a political objective. But as far as the specific motivators, I think they probably change from individual to individual."
Speaking in Ottawa at an enrolment ceremony for 225 new Canadian military recruits, Prime Minister Stephen Harper offered his views.
"As at other times in our history, we are a target because of who we are and how we live, our society, our diversity and our values values such as freedom, democracy and the rule of law the values that make Canada great, values that Canadians cherish."
With files from Jessica Leeder, Harold Levy and Tonda MacCharles
300# actual nitrogen per acre from a 34-0-0 mixture is about 6000# total pounds for 6 acres. Each hundred weight only yields 34# actual N. Watch out for those tricky fractions.
Need we say anything else? The names speak for themselves.
Sounds like damn fine police work and intel to me!
Hi there. Good to see you.
Nah, rather I'm waiting for the moment when the chattering class in Toronto and Montreal cry that had Paul Martin remained in power this wouldn't happen. "See, they started planning this once we switched sides to become Uncle Sam's lapdog!"
This afternoon I heard on Fox that the Mooslims in Toronto were all upset because maybe now citizens might be anti-Mooslim and they may "be facing some discrimination and hate crimes."
Hey...All you MODERATE MOOSLIMOS...
How about you all get into the street in Toronto and DENOUNCE these terrorist youth scum?!!!!
N oooo...you just whine about possible hate crimes now.
There are no moderate Mooslims...this just proves it again!!
I'm sure you own all of these items AND had contact with suspected terrorists in the U.S. AND regularly chatted on known terrorist websites AND visited a terrorist training camp within the past two years AND rented a car for someone who was caught smuggling guns taped to his thighs while crossing the Canadian border AND were associated with persons who were seen taking notes outside of the Canadian counter-terrorist unit's office building and were spotted in that building's basement.
At some point, things stop becoming mere coincidences.
I think there's enough going on that "looks funny" here to justify an investigation.
If these guys are OK, then they can just explain the science project that involved cell phone triggers, AN, handguns, ammo, plans, and contacts, and if they are on the level, the cops will let them go.
I've been stopped by cops who thought things looked "funny" and after a brief explanation things were OK. (I got stopped for having two large lobsterscope devices protruding from my trunk. They looked like pretty big TV sets by the smalltown cops, and they pulled me over- after explaining what they were, they let me go, no problem).
You still working on that anti-gravity device?
You are right, I blew right through it. It doesnt pay to let the musklims piss me off.
Geez, I used to do this. I wasnt thinking actual. 3# of product per pound of actual, 900# product per A. 6000/900=6.6 A.
I retract my remarks.
What a dickwad.
At a minimum all relative and sympathizers of these peckerheads
need to be repatriated to some muzzie friendly country.
Those involved need to be dealt with like spys or saboteurs in WW2. SHOT!!!
No pussy footing with long drawn out civilian trials like the U.S.
These are enemy combatants and should be tried and treated as such.
Someone should write out a Constitutional Amendment authorizing a U.S. national police force in the mold of the RCMP...
Muslims scare me. I am serious.
Nothing on the world spooks me more than Islam does.
It's a metric tonne, not the "ton" we use in the U.S. 3 metric tonnes is about 6,614 U.S. pounds.
This is the very essence of Political Correctness a Disease attributed to the liberalist brain denial and the blaming of politics or some other form of organized falderal instead of looking at ones self and seeing the wrong in it's culminating of fact's
Teach your children NOT to be Liberal by any means but in real giving for that is the true meaning of charity it is giving from the heart liberalism has sout to capture what it cannot control in the word charity
The very word liberal should be struck from existance and every liberal mindset should be given immediate medical treatment for disorders uncommon to clear thinking
You cannot teach common sense but every college across the globe has and dose teach one form or another of the liberalism lie !
Right, and 1 short or net ton is 2,000 pounds or 0.907 metric tonnes.
(Denny Crane: "Every one should carry a gun strapped to their waist. We need more - not less guns.")
The RCMP is famous for its stings. My bet is that CSIS found these guys on the internet, and from the local muslims who got bumped out of their mosque when they took it over. Not everybody (or even most people) were ready for, or interested in the wahabbist power hour they set up.
After that it would have gone to RCMP, who would have controlled the availability of the bomb materials to them, gathered up evidence of intent, and figured out who was who in the organization. After enough gathering, they opened the trap door, and here we are.
Lots of our domestic terrorists find that "Mother Mountie" is a very generous old bird when it comes to useful terror toys. Unfortunately she isn't really to be trusted, and has some very hard men at her disposal. This is an old game, and it just got a few more losers.
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