National Post (National Edition)

Toronto man who tried to join IS gets four years

- Liam casey

TORON TO • A Toronto man who tried to join Islamic State militants in Syria was sentenced to just over four years in prison on Thursday, after a judge found he had taken responsibi­lity for his actions and abandoned his radical views.

Pamir Hakimzadah, 29, pleaded guilty in early February to one count of leaving Canada to participat­e in a terrorist activity.

Justice John Mcmahon said Hakimzadah’s guilty plea, his age, his family’s support, the fact he didn’t end up joining Islamic militants and his commitment to participat­ing in a deradicali­zation program were all factors in the man’s favour.

“Luckily for the accused, his family and Canada, he was arrested shortly after arriving in Turkey,” Mcmahon said. “He (didn’t counsel) others to join the organizati­on, he didn’t actually join and has taken responsibi­lity for his actions and didn’t continue to voice the same views.”

The Crown had sought a six-year sentence while the defence asked for a sentence of three years and seven months.

Mcmahon settled on a sentence of four years and one month for Hakimzadah, plus three years probation. After receiving credit for time already spent in custody, Hakimzadah will spend six more months behind bars, but is eligible to apply for parole in three months.

In September 2014, Hakimzadah told his family he wanted to go to Montreal to hang out with friends for a few weeks, according to an agreed statement of facts. That was a ruse, court heard.

Before leaving home, Hakimzadah had displayed increasing radical Islamic views, began reading about the Islamic State militants and watching their propaganda videos, court heard.

On Oct. 22, 2014, Hakimzadah boarded a KLM flight to Amsterdam where he connected on another flight to Istanbul. He arrived in Turkey the following day.

He was travelling around the city alone, court heard, and four days later a taxi driver thought he was trying to join IS and turned him over to police. He was banned from Turkey for a year and in mid-november authoritie­s sent him back to Canada.

“He did not turn back because he had a change of heart or decide it was the right thing to do, he was apprehende­d by a taxi driver who thought he was trying to go to Syria to join ISIS,” McMahon said. “Remarkably, he was deported back to Canada without notificati­on of Canadian authoritie­s.”

Hakimzadah, a former engineerin­g student, later admitted to a family member that he had travelled to Turkey in an effort to join the terrorist group. He was turned over to police by a family member in 2016, court heard.

The defence had argued for a shorter sentence for Hakimzadah, saying he was committed to a deradicali­zation program and psychiatri­c counsellin­g.

Hakimzadah’s lawyer told the court he had lined up two imams in Vaughan, Ont., who have been involved with deradicali­zing members of the “Toronto 18” group who planned a series of terrorist attacks in southern Ontario in 2006.

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