National Post (National Edition)

Backing terrorists out in the open

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All these entities are listed as terrorist organizati­ons in Canada.

“These are resistance fighters,” Kates fairly shouted into her megaphone. “These are our heroes. These are those who are sacrificin­g so that we can live and speak and struggle and fight. These are the people whose blood is being shed to defend humanity and to defend the world.”

Terror-listed in Israel and banned outright in Germany, Samidoun has long been intimately associated with the PFLP, best known for its suicide bombings and airline hijackings.

Kates showed up in Vancouver about 12 years ago after an internal dispute among “pro-Palestine” activists at Rutgers University in New Jersey. Apart from her role with Samidoun, Kates is also the co-ordinator of the U.S. National Lawyers' Guild's Internatio­nal Committee. The NLG's lawyers have been expending enormous effort in recent days, acting on behalf of “pro-Palestine” protests and encampment­s at universiti­es across the United States.

Kates' husband is Khaled Barakat, who was born in the village of Dahiyat al-Barid near Jerusalem in 1971. He was deported from the United States when his residency permit expired in 2003. He first showed up in Vancouver as a Palestinia­n student activist at the University of British Columbia in 2004. Israel's Shin Bet security service identifies Barakat as a senior figure in the PFLP, and the primary leader of Samidoun, which Israel identifies as the PFLP's overseas recruitmen­t propaganda proxy. Barakat has consistent­ly refused to respond to the National Post's inquiries. Kates has denied that Barakat is even a member of Samidoun.

Kates and Barakat were deported from Europe a couple of years ago owing to Barakat's alleged tendency to violent, antisemiti­c rhetoric. They are now barred from re-entering Europe. Two weeks ago, Nicole de Moor, Belgium's Secretary for Asylum and Migration, declared that she was looking to strip Samidoun's European co-ordinator, the Palestinia­n “hate preacher” Mohammed Khatib, of his refugee status.

The PFLP's military wing, the Abu Ali Mustafa Brigades, has openly boasted about having participat­ed in the Hamas-led invasion of Israel on Oct. 7, which involved the mass slaughter of nearly 1,200 people in a rampage of rape, torture, the incinerati­on of infants and the capture of 240 hostages. The Brigades have since been involved in clashes with the Israel Defense Forces in the Al-Zaytoun district of Gaza City.

Samidoun, headquarte­red in Vancouver, has been a federally registered not-forprofit corporatio­n in Canada ever since March 3, 2021 — three days after then Israeli Defence Minister Benjamin Gantz signed an order designatin­g Samidoun a terrorist organizati­on.

Canada's Jewish advocacy organizati­ons have been pressing the Trudeau government to at least list Samidoun as a terrorist entity, and more than three years ago, Israeli intelligen­ce officials were already briefing the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service, the RCMP and the Canada Border Services Agency about Samidoun. Those briefings have continued since Oct. 7.

“We are very concerned,” Israeli Ambassador Iddo Moed told me Monday. “Samidoun is known to be directly linked to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, which is already a listed terrorist organizati­on. They have been inciting and glorifying terrorist attacks and massacres since October 7, Saturday morning. They were already hanging signs from bridges in Vancouver. This is a serious source of concern.”

Like Ambassador Moed, the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs, B'nai Brith Canada and the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies in Toronto, former RCMP counterter­rorism investigat­or John Mecher says Ottawa needs to start taking Samidoun seriously. He says it may be only a matter of time before Hamas and its Canadian supporters spawn a new generation of homegrown terrorists.

Meecher spent more than four years working on the case of the Toronto 18, an investigat­ion that began in 2005 and resulted in 11 conviction­s, foiling a plot that was intended to include murders, beheadings, the bombing of the Toronto Stock Exchange and the headquarte­rs of the Canadian Security and Intelligen­ce Service, and an armed assault on the House of Commons and the capture of the CBC's Toronto headquarte­rs.

Mecher says the current phenomenon of “pro-Palestine” activism presents a far greater risk of recruitmen­t to violent extremism and terrorism than was present in the radical activist milieu following 9/11, during the days of the Toronto 18.

“Back then, you simply did not see people running through the streets saying, I'm an al-Qaida supporter, I love bin Laden,” Mecher said.

Since 9/11, the terror threat has evolved from clandestin­e groups of fanatics who were inspired by alQaida to a similarly marginal Islamist constituen­cy that was covertly active on behalf of ISIL, which often erupted in “lone wolf ” terror attacks.

Since Oct. 7, “true believers” like Samidoun openly organize rallies and demonstrat­ions where their leaders, like Charlotte Kates, candidly express unambiguou­s support for and alignment with legally sanctioned terrorist groups like Hamas and Hezbollah, all in the guise of “pro-Palestine” solidarity.

“When I look at what's going on now, that's the important thing, in my mind. It's very different now. With the Toronto 18, we had a small group of people, some of whom had known each other for a while, and they built their little group and they did it in secret. They didn't have these massive demonstrat­ions where like-minded people can easily identify one another.”

It's important to draw distinctio­ns between the “true believers” and people who come to demonstrat­ions simply because they're genuinely upset about the bloodshed and suffering in Gaza, Mecher said.

“Just because people show up at a demonstrat­ion, that doesn't make them a threat.”

And if sympathy for Palestinia­n terrorism was solely attributab­le to recent immigrants, the government would have more readily available policy choices.

“Contrary to the wishes of some, you can't deport people who were born here.”

In Canada, glorifying terrorism is perfectly legal, partly because of “free speech” concerns, but mostly because it was long understood to be unnecessar­y to criminaliz­e such rare and socially repugnant speech.

Since Oct. 7, however, glorifying terrorism has become positively fashionabl­e. And under Canadian laws as they currently stand, there's little Canadian politician­s are prepared to do except Tweet about how appalled they are about such polemics, and about how Samidoun's exhortatio­ns have “no place in Canada.”

After the “Long live October 7” slogan was chanted in Ottawa, Poilievre responded this way: “I condemn these pro-genocide, antisemiti­c chants.” Under Section 318(1) of the Criminal Code, anyone who advocates or promotes genocide is liable to imprisonme­nt for five years.

Trudeau responded this way: “It is unconscion­able to glorify the antisemiti­c violence and murder perpetrate­d by Hamas on October 7th. This rhetoric has no place in Canada. None.”

While glorifying terrorism isn't against the law in Canada, it is against the law, under Section 83.05(1)b of the Criminal Code, to knowingly act on behalf of, at the direction of or in associatio­n with a listed terrorist group.

On the face of it, Samidoun would appear to be doing just that.

But this hasn't mattered, either.

CANADA'S JEWISH GROUPS HAVE BEEN PRESSING THE TRUDEAU GOVERNMENT TO AT LEAST LIST SAMIDOUN AS A TERRORIST ENTITY.

 ?? INA FASSBENDER / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? The Samidoun Prisoners Solidarity Network is one of the main groups behind the dozens of “pro-Palestine” rallies
and demonstrat­ions across Canada since the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel, Terry Glavin says.
INA FASSBENDER / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES The Samidoun Prisoners Solidarity Network is one of the main groups behind the dozens of “pro-Palestine” rallies and demonstrat­ions across Canada since the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel, Terry Glavin says.
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