Saskatoon StarPhoenix

WEEKS AFTER A FAILED ISIL-INSPIRED SUICIDE BOMBING ON CANADIAN SOIL, A REPORT SAYS THE COUNTRY’S “PRINCIPAL TERRORIST THREAT” COMES FROM THOSE INSPIRED BY EXTREMIST IDEOLOGIES.

ISIL, others fostering extremism here

- STEWART BELL REPORTS.

TORONTO • Canada’s “principal terrorist threat” comes from those inspired by extremist ideologies to conduct attacks, the government said Thursday in its latest update on the security challenges facing the country.

Released by Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale just over two weeks after a failed ISIL-inspired suicide bombing in Ontario, the report said ISIL and its sibling alQaida “continue to appeal to certain individual­s in Canada.”

Some promote violence online, radicalize their peers, recruit and fundraise, it said. “Others may consider travelling abroad to join a terrorist group or conducting terrorist attacks themselves,” said the 2016 Public Report on the Terrorist Threat to Canada.

As of the end of 2015, about 180 “individual­s with a nexus to Canada” were suspected of participat­ing in terrorist activities overseas, up from 130 the previous year, it said. More than half were thought to be in Turkey, Iraq or Syria.

About 20 per cent of Canada’s extremist travellers were women, the report said, adding that in Syria the women were not only serving as brides but were also training and fighting in some cases.

Some have brought their children with them.

The report again raised questions about how authoritie­s are dealing with the dozens of returnees — those who are back in Canada after taking part in overseas terrorism. The government was aware of about 60 such people.

It said they could use their “skills, experience and relationsh­ips” to recruit or plan attacks in Canada, noting that the recent terror killings in Paris and Brussels were carried out by former ISIL fighters who had returned to Europe.

But while the report said returnees could cause “serious security concerns for their home countries,” none of those who have come back to Canada from Syria and Iraq have been charged with terrorism offences. One who returned to Canada after being injured went back to fight with ISIL once he had healed in Windsor, Ont.

“Canadians can be assured that the RCMP is carefully monitoring these individual­s who have returned to Canada as it is a top priority,” said Scott Bardsley, Goodale’s press secretary. He said the government was using “a number of tools,” including passport revocation­s.

The Canadian government has been struggling to deal with ex-foreign fighters since the conflict in Afghanista­n in the 1980s and ’90s, said Larry Brooks, a former Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service counter-terrorism official.

The central problem is proving to the satisfacti­on of a Canadian judge that someone had engaged in terrorism in a foreign country, particular­ly the lawless ones where terrorist groups like al-Qaida and ISIL are based, he said.

“It’s tremendous­ly difficult to collect credible evidence that would satisfy a Canadian court for prosecutio­n,” said Brooks, who was the operationa­l manager of the CSIS investigat­ion of the Toronto 18.

“The challenges are significan­t.”

He said Crown attorneys were also reluctant to prosecute.

“Nobody likes to lose a case but federal prosecutor­s seem to be loath to do anything but an open and shut, iron case.” But he also said prosecutio­n might not be the best option for some returnees.

Twenty people have been convicted of terrorism offences since 2002, the report said. Another 21 have been charged and are either awaiting trial or are wanted on outstandin­g warrants. Several of those wanted are believed to be dead.

The annual public update on terrorist threats was launched by the previous Conservati­ves but no report was issued last year, and this was the first under the Trudeau government. Goodale has been under pressure to reassure Canadians on his government’s response to terrorism since the Aug. 10 police killing of an ISIL supporter in Strathroy, Ont.

Although he was the subject of a terrorism peace bond, Aaron Driver built a homemade bomb and recorded a martyrdom video saying his planned attack was a response to ISIL’s call for “jihadi in the lands of the crusaders.”

The FBI notified the RCMP about the video and Driver was quickly put under surveillan­ce. Confronted by a police tactical team after he got into a taxi outside his house, the 24-year-old tried to detonate a bomb in his backpack and was shot dead.

“Canada is fundamenta­lly a safe and peaceful nation, but we are not naive about the security issues that dominate the world’s attention,” Goodale said in a foreword to the report. Canada’s threat level is at medium, meaning an attack “could occur.”

Aside from ISIL and alQaida, the report singled out Hezbollah as a particular threat to Canadian interests and noted the Lebanese terror group was “supported by” Iran and “remains one of the world’s most capable terrorist groups.”

“Hezbollah has networks around the world, including in Canada, and uses the networks for recruitmen­t, fundraisin­g and procuremen­t. Hezbollah terrorist operations abroad represent a threat to Canadian interests.”

IT’S TREMENDOUS­LY DIFFICULT TO COLLECT ... EVIDENCE THAT WOULD SATISFY A CANADIAN COURT FOR PROSECUTIO­N.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A report from Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale saying ISIL and al-Qaida “continue to appeal to certain individual­s in Canada” comes two weeks after a failed ISIL-inspired terror attack in Ontario by Aaron Driver, whose image is seen behind RCMP...
JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS A report from Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale saying ISIL and al-Qaida “continue to appeal to certain individual­s in Canada” comes two weeks after a failed ISIL-inspired terror attack in Ontario by Aaron Driver, whose image is seen behind RCMP...

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