The Niagara Falls Review

Few extremist returnees: report

Many who left Canada fear arrest on return

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA — There has been no surge of extremist travellers returning to Canada, despite the overseas setbacks suffered by militant forces in Iraq and Syria, a new federal report says.

The annual report on the terrorist threat to Canada says a wave of returnees is not expected because many who have gone abroad now lack valid travel documents, find themselves on a no-fly list or fear being arrested on Canadian soil.

Others want to stay and help extremist groups, have been captured or have died.

As members of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant scatter, the Liberal government has come under pressure to explain what it’s doing to contain any threat from foreign fighters returning to Canada.

The report says some 190 people with connection­s to Canada are suspected of terrorist activity abroad and, in addition, approximat­ely another 60 have returned — numbers that have remained static over the last three years.

The activities of these Canadians in various countries could involve front-line fighting, training, logistical support, fundraisin­g or studying at extremisti­nfluenced schools.

A “relatively small number” of the 60 people have returned from Turkey, Iraq or Syria, the report says, without providing more details.

The Conservati­ves have peppered the government with questions in the House of Commons about ensuring the safety of Canadians — accusing the Liberals of welcoming returnees with open arms.

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says Canadian security and intelligen­ce forces are working with their internatio­nal counterpar­ts to investigat­e Canadians who travelled overseas to join terrorists.

He has repeatedly expressed confidence in the ability of security agencies to manage any threat returnees might pose in Canada.

The priority is to investigat­e their activities, collect the necessary evidence and prosecute them under Canadian law, Goodale said Tuesday. “That is our No. 1 goal.”

Though ISIL’s territoria­l holdings in the Syria-Iraq conflict zone continue to shrink, Canada has not seen a related influx in the number of extremist travellers who have returned to Canada, “nor does it expect to,” the report says.

The group Families Against Violent Extremism has said Canadians detained by Kurdish authoritie­s in Syrian territory include nine families and more than 10 children, including some who were taken to Syria at young ages and others who were born there. The notion of bringing children back to Canada while leaving their extremist parents behind is problemati­c, Goodale said.

“You create almost by definition a generation of orphans. At the same time, you don’t want to create a second generation of terrorists,” he said.

“No country has a perfect solution to this. The reality of the situation is that these people abandoned the democratic advantages of Canada — went to another part of the world voluntaril­y to engage in the most insidious acts of terrorism.”

Overall, Canada’s national terrorism threat level is medium, meaning a violent act of terrorism “could occur,” the report says. That’s the third position on a five-point scale and it’s unchanged from October 2014.

The principal terrorist threat to Canada continues to stem from individual­s or groups who are inspired by violent Sunni Islamist ideology and terrorist groups, such as ISIL and al-Qaida, it says.

“Canada also remains concerned about threats posed by those who harbour right-wing extremist views,” the report adds.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says Canadian security and intelligen­ce forces are working with their internatio­nal counterpar­ts to investigat­e Canadians who travelled overseas to join terrorists.
ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says Canadian security and intelligen­ce forces are working with their internatio­nal counterpar­ts to investigat­e Canadians who travelled overseas to join terrorists.

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