Calgary Herald

CITIZENSHI­P MAY BE REVOKED

Pakistani- Canadian in U. S. prison

- STEWART BELL

A Pakistani- Canadian imprisoned in California over a plot to decapitate employees of a Danish newspaper and throw their heads onto the street is among those targeted for revocation of their citizenshi­p under a controvers­ial new law, the National Post has learned.

Tahawwur Hussain Rana, 54, is the only one of the 10 Canadians whose citizenshi­p the government is seeking to revoke for terrorism who was convicted by a foreign court, the U. S. District Court in Chicago. He is serving a 14- yearsenten­ce at a prison in California.

The former owner of First World Immigratio­n Services, which operated in Toronto and Chicago, Rana was convicted in 2011 of conspiracy in relation to a plot to attack the Morgenavis­en Jyllands- Posten newspaper for publishing a cartoon depicting the Muslim Prophet Muhammad.

He was also convicted of providing material support to Lashkare-Tayyiba, the Pakistani terrorist group that sent 10 gunmen to Mumbai, India, in 2008 to attack major hotels, a train station and a Jewish centre. More than 160 died, including two Canadians.

Rana was living in Illinois when he was arrested in 2009. The U. S. Bureau of Prisons says his scheduled release date is Dec. 28, 2021. Upon completion of his sentence, he would likely have been deported to Canada.

If his Canadian citizenshi­p is successful­ly revoked, he would no longer have any status in Canada. The process is expected to take several months and could be subject to appeal. At least three Canadian terror convicts have already launched court challenges against the possible revocation of their citizenshi­p.

According to a source, Rana is among those who have fallen foul of legislatio­n that came into force in May. This allows Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Canada to strip convicted terrorists of their Canadian citizenshi­p, provided they are also citizens of a second country.

The Post revealed Saturday that Toronto 18 leader Zakaria Amara had become the first to lose his citizenshi­p. Another eight convicted of terrorism offences in Canada are still in the revocation process, among them Saad Gaya, who was born in Quebec to parents of Pakistani heritage.

The 10th, Rana, is the only one whose revocation depends on the decision of a foreign judicial system. The legislatio­n applies to those convicted of terrorism outside Canada, but only if the same evidence would have also resulted in a conviction by a Canadian court.

The citizenshi­p law, which is similar to legislatio­n in the United Kingdom and Australia, has become an election issue in recent days, with Prime Minister Stephen Harper defending it during Monday night’s leaders’ debate on foreign policy. The Liberals and the New Democratic Party have both pledged to scrap it if elected.

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 ?? VERA SADOCK/ AGENCE FRANCE- PRESSE/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Tahawwur Hussain Rana, right, was sketched during a 2009 court appearance in Chicago.
VERA SADOCK/ AGENCE FRANCE- PRESSE/ GETTY IMAGES Tahawwur Hussain Rana, right, was sketched during a 2009 court appearance in Chicago.

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