Lethbridge Herald

Threat report highlights deadly attacks

- Jim Bronskill THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Extremists are increasing­ly carrying out simple but deadly attacks using knives and vehicles, Public Safety Canada warns in its latest assessment of the terrorist threat.

Such unsophisti­cated but “high-impact” assaults took place recently in Edmonton, where five people were injured, and in New York, killing eight people and injuring several more, the annual report released Thursday notes.

“These kinds of potential weapons are easy to obtain and it is therefore difficult to prevent their use in attacks.”

In addition, it notes that Daesh and al-Qaida propaganda has provided guidance to supporters on the use of small arms, vehicles and bladed weapons, offering suggestion­s on how to inflict the most harm.

“Such encouragem­ent to use simple weapons empowers those who would otherwise be incapable of conducting a more complex terrorist attack.”

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says in a preface to the report that recent events around the world serve as a reminder that any type of radical ideology, including right-wing extremism, can fuel terrorism.

Canadians have become all too familiar with the tragic consequenc­es of extremism, from the shooting at a mosque in Quebec City that took six lives and injured many more, to the attack in Burkina Faso in which six Canadians were killed, Goodale says.

The principal terrorist threat to Canada continues to stem from extremists inspired by violent Islamist ideology and by terrorist groups such as Daesh and al-Qaida to carry out an attack in Canada, the report says.

Some individual­s in Canada who are attracted to such ideologies participat­e in online forums, the circulatio­n of extremist propaganda, terrorist financing and travelling to join terrorist groups abroad.

Just over 190 extremists with a nexus to Canada are overseas and suspected of engaging in terrorist activity, the report says. In addition, the government is aware of about 60 who have returned to Canada.

These numbers have remained relatively stable over the last two years, as it has become more difficult for extremists to successful­ly leave or return to Canada, the government says.

Slightly more than half of the Canadian-linked extremists abroad are in Turkey, Syria or Iraq.

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