National Post (National Edition)

Crackdown on Afghan street gangs

Members implicated in stabbings, shootings, and auto-insurance fraud

- BY STEWART BELL in Toronto

The tattoo on Farhad Abdul Fatah’s right shoulder shows an AK-47 assault rifle over a burning Afghan flag. AFGUN, it reads. According to Toronto police, the tattoo is the mark of an Afghan street gang whose members have been implicated in stabbings, shootings, drugs, robberies, thefts and, most recently, automobile-insurance fraud.

Afghan For Life and its more violent-sounding offshoot, Afghan Fighting Generation, emerged partly in Toronto’s Thorncliff­e Park neighbourh­ood, a hub of Canada’s fast-growing Afghan population. Police and immigratio­n enforcemen­t officers have now launched deportatio­n proceeding­s against several alleged members, including Mr. Fatah, a 28-yearold Russian-speaking Afghan from Thorncliff­e Park.

Since 2002, more than 23,000 Afghans have become permanent residents of Canada. Gang members began tagging Afghan neighbourh­oods with Afghan For Life (AFL or A4L) and Afghan Fighting Generation (AFG) symbols a decade ago.

“The evidence shows that the AFL/AFG evolved within smaller neighborho­ods of Toronto, where a number of Afghan youth lived or went to school,” according to the Immigratio­n and Refugee Board. “The membership of the AFL/AFG is made up largely of persons of Afghan background.”

Members of AFL/AFG range in age from 16 to 24. time, the gang armed itself with handguns, clashed with the rival Flemo Boys and shot a member of the Rascals.

“The activities of the mem-

I think it’s a new community trying

to find its place in here

While most are Afghan, at least one is Iranian. Police said 10 were known to have variations of the ‘AFGUN’ tattoo worn by Mr. Fatah. Over bers include simply ganging up on a fellow student, evolving to possession of multiple weapons,” the Refugee Board wrote last August when it dealt with Mr. Fatah’s deportatio­n case.

Jehad Aliweiwi, executive director of the Thorncliff­e Neighbourh­ood Office, a local social agency, said gangs were not a significan­t problem in the area, although he had seen AFL graffiti in the past.

“When I used to walk a little bit around the park you will see ‘Afghan’ or ‘ Afghan For Life.’ And young kids in our youth centre, we have a lot of Afghan kids,” he said.

But he said he was less worried about gangs than the high drop-out rate among Afghan boys. “That said, I think there is a lot of affinity with a group like the Afghan For Life for maybe social and belonging reasons, Afghan pride and all that,” he said. “I think it’s a new community that’s trying to find its place in here. It’s part of a struggle of integratio­n.”

Also known as Kanishka, Mr. Fatah was born in Afghanista­n in 1985 but fled to Russia shortly after Soviet troops withdrew from the country.

They’re still active but their violence has de-escalated

He came to Canada as a refugee, arriving in Vancouver in 2003. According to the Refugee Board, his gang involvemen­t began three years later.

“He acquired a tattoo in 2006 commonly used by members of the AFL/AFG,” the Board wrote. “He claims he did so as a symbol of the violence in Afghanista­n. Mr. Fatah could not explain why he expended hundreds of dollars and went through hours of pain to obtain a tattoo to symbolize events that he had no personal recollecti­on of.”

Between 2006 and 2011, he amassed a criminal record involving weapons, threats and drugs. He was convicted of possession of a prohibited weapon — brass knuckles — and possession of cocaine and magic mushrooms. He was arrested following a 2009 stabbing (and acquitted after the victims recanted their statements at trial).

By 2010, Mr. Fatah had been seen repeatedly in the company of other AFGL/AFG gang members. An informant told police Mr. Fatah wanted to become a gang leader.

That December, Toronto police responded to a shoot-- ing and found Mr. Fatah in a car with three others. A Bryco 380 automatic handgun was found under his seat. Mr. Fatah claimed he found it in bushes outside a Tim Hortons. He pleaded guilty to unauthoriz­ed possession of a firearm. In addition to a 224-day sentence, he was banned from possessing weapons for 99 years.

The Canada Border Services Agency brought Mr. Fatah’s case to the Refugee Board last year, arguing that as a for- eign national and a member of a criminal organizati­on, he should be deported. Mr. Fatah denied any gang affiliatio­n and portrayed himself as a peaceful person with no interest in weapons or violence. The IRB did not believe him. “He has not been able to credibly explain his gang tattoos, his repeated associatio­ns with gang members, or his weapons possession conviction­s,” the board wrote in its ruling. A deportatio­n order was issued on Aug. 2.

The crackdown on Afghan gangs is Canada’s latest attempt to use immigratio­n laws to tackle street gangs. Despite being responsibl­e for much of the gun violence in Canadian cities, gang members sometimes escape prosecutio­n because victims won’t cooperate and witnesses fear retributio­n.

While that makes criminal conviction­s challengin­g, in recent years, police and immigratio­n officials have teamed up to try a different approach: breaking up gangs by deporting key members to their home countries.

In Montreal, the tactic has been used against Haitian gangs. Honduran gangs have been targeted in Vancouver, while in Toronto immigratio­n enforcemen­t was partly responsibl­e for ending the open warfare between Tamil gangs. Now Afghan gangs have been added to the list.

Since immigratio­n officers went after Mr. Fatah and his colleagues, the AFL/AFG has become involved in automobile accident fraud — staging fake car crashes to collect insurance money, according to police.

But while the gang is still active, it has scaled back its violence, said Det. Const. Steve Kerr, a member of the Toronto Police Service’s Guns and Gang Task Force who testified at Mr. Fatah’s immigratio­n hearing.

“A couple of years ago they were very active with regards to a lot of the violent crime that was happening in around Thorncliff­e and that area … and Fatah was one of the well known guys that was trying to be the leader of that gang,” he said.

The deportatio­n order against Mr. Fatah appears to have been a turning point. “Since that decision, things have quieted down. They’re still active but their violence has de-escalated. I guess you could say that they’re more into frauds.”

Mr. Fatah has been in custody since October, 2011. The government is currently deciding whether his deportatio­n is justified when the danger he poses to Canadians is balanced against the risks he could face in Afghanista­n, a country he last saw in 1991, when he was six years old. “He is still here,” his lawyer Rodney Woolf said. “He is in detention and the minister is seeking to remove him, that’s all I can tell you at the moment.”

At a detention hearing, he gave his occupation as “grass cutter” and said he needed to get back to work to help his father, who is 60 and on a disability pension. “Maybe you are just looking at his tattoo,” he said, speaking through a Russian interprete­r, “that is why you think that he is a member of the gang.”

 ?? MATTHEW SHERWOOD FOR NATIONAL POST ?? Since 2002, more than 23,000 Afghans have emigrated to Canada, with Afghan gang symbols starting around that time.
MATTHEW SHERWOOD FOR NATIONAL POST Since 2002, more than 23,000 Afghans have emigrated to Canada, with Afghan gang symbols starting around that time.
 ?? MATTHEW SHERWOOD FOR NATIONAL POST ?? The Afghan for Life and Afghan Fighting Generation gangs have been traced back to the Thorncliff­e Park neighbourh­ood.
MATTHEW SHERWOOD FOR NATIONAL POST The Afghan for Life and Afghan Fighting Generation gangs have been traced back to the Thorncliff­e Park neighbourh­ood.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada