Waterloo Region Record

Edmonton suspect’s past didn’t raiseflags

Somali refugee charged in weekend attacks known to police, but wasn’t considered an active threat

- Stephanie Levitz The Canadian Press

OTTAWA — Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale tried Monday to assuage renewed concerns about the security of Canada’s asylum system after it emerged the suspect in a weekend attack in Edmonton entered Canada as a refugee in 2012.

Abdulahi Hasan Sharif is facing 11 charges — including five counts of attempted murder — after a city police officer was stabbed and four people were struck by a cube van in what authoritie­s have characteri­zed as an act of terror.

Sharif, a Somali national, became known to police in 2015 after a report was received that he may have been radicalize­d, but investigat­ors determined at that time that he did not pose a threat.

Nor is there any suggestion the accused was assessed as a public safety risk when he entered Canada at a legal border crossing in 2012, Goodale said Monday.

“There was no deleteriou­s informatio­n that was available at that stage,” Goodale said.

Goodale said the procedures in place to vet newcomers are extensive, and include criminal background checks both in Canada and abroad, but would not discuss Sharif ’s case further given the ongoing police investigat­ion.

That Goodale took pains to point out how Sharif entered the country highlights the current tension around Canada’s asylum system. Since the start of the year, upwards of 13,000 people have been arrested crossing illegally in Canada in order to seek asylum.

Fears the border crossers aren’t being vetted properly is one of the concerns MPs say they keep hearing. Border officials were pressed extensivel­y at a House of Commons immigratio­n committee hearing last week on the security screening procedures in place.

In the early part of the year, the majority of those who entered in Manitoba were Somali nationals.

Edmonton police erroneousl­y said Sunday that Sharif was in the process of applying for refugee status, but Goodale’s department quickly clarified that he’d actually been declared a refugee long ago.

A spokespers­on for the minister was asked whether the current situation at the border was the reason the government sought to correct the record.

“It’s a complex situation and we need to be precise with the facts so that Canadians can understand it,” Scott Bardsley said in an email.

Among the complexiti­es: how Sharif ’s immigratio­n status could affect what happens next. Different outcomes can await people with refugee status in Canada and who are later charged with serious crimes, ranging from deportatio­n to a loss of their status as permanent residents.

Opposition MP Michelle Rempel asked Goodale whether Sharif would be deported if he were to be found guilty.

Goodale said it was too early to say.

“Those charges, depending how they are dealt with in the final analysis by the courts, will determine the future prosecutio­n of this case.”

The general security of Canada’s immigratio­n system is an ongoing concern for many Canadians.

In focus groups held earlier this year by the Immigratio­n, Refugees and Citizenshi­p department, respondent­s discussing how many immigrants and refugees Canada ought to let in each year raised security as an issue.

“We’re accepting all these people but are we making sure they’re safe to come to Canada? It’s a concern,” one participan­t told the group.

Immigrants to Canada who were part of the focus groups were more likely to raise security as an issue, the report on the focus groups said.

“Participan­ts did not necessaril­y have any proof or examples that security measures were being relaxed or inefficien­t. They simply want reassuranc­es that compromise­s are not being made to accommodat­e an immigratio­n policy that is seeing 300,000 new people entering the country each year, including an important contingent of refugees.”

 ??  ?? Abdulahi Hasan Sharif was charged after the Edmonton attacks.
Abdulahi Hasan Sharif was charged after the Edmonton attacks.

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