Waterloo Region Record

Women among Canadian extremists

1 in 5 who travel abroad to join IS is female: report

- Jim Bronskill

OTTAWA — Women account for about one-fifth of extremists from Canada who head overseas, says the government’s latest public report on terrorism.

In some cases women have taken their children to conflict zones, says the annual assessment of the terrorist threat.

The report issued Thursday says the participat­ion of women in terrorist organizati­ons is not new. However, there has been an increase in the number of women who have travelled or attempted to travel abroad to join the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

The report says it is often unclear what roles are performed by women who travel to join extremist groups.

It notes the most common assumption is women travel abroad to marry terrorists, but some may occupy secondary roles within extremist groups, and in other cases appear to be taking part in combat.

Groups such as Boko Haram in North Africa are using female suicide bombers to cause mass casualties, the report adds. “Some of these women and girls were likely kidnapped and forced into the attacks, while others may be willing relatives of male fighters who have been killed.”

As of the end of 2015, the federal government was aware of approximat­ely 180 people abroad with a nexus to Canada who were suspected of engaging in terrorism-related activities, the report says. More than half were believed to be in Turkey, Iraq or Syria.

The government was also aware of a further 60 extremist travellers who had returned to Canada. The figures are consistent with ones made public in February by CSIS director Michel Coulombe.

The report says the phenomenon of extremist travellers — including those abroad, those who return and those prevented from travelling — poses a range of security concerns for Canada.

Returning travellers may have “skills, experience and relationsh­ips developed abroad that could be used to recruit or inspire individual­s in Canada,” it says. They may also engage in terrorist financing, help others travel or plan attacks in Canada. The principal terrorist threat to Canada continues to be violent extremists who could be inspired by groups like ISIL and al-Qaida to carry out an assault, the government says.

Jihadi sympathize­r Aaron Driver was killed by police during a confrontat­ion in Strathroy, Ont., earlier this month after a martyrdom video he made came to the attention of authoritie­s.

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