The Niagara Falls Review

Coddling would-be jihadists doesn’t work

- TAREK FATAH

It’s a scary thought that had it not been for an FBI tip, Aaron Driver, a Canadian convert to Islam, could have pulled off a major terrorist attack at a public venue in London, Ont., or even Toronto.

This, despite the fact Driver was under the noses of Canada’s security and spy agencies. Fortunatel­y, the ISIS-inspired lone wolf was shot dead before he could do any damage.

The incident should have sent alarm bells ringing, but with the Conservati­ves and NDP orphaned without permanent leaders, the Trudeau government succeeded in portraying this near disaster as a success story.

By contrast, the Winnipeg lawyer who represente­d Driver had some scathing criticism of the RCMP.

Leonard Tailleur told the London Free Press: “How in the world this could happen under the nose of the RCMP is beyond me. I am actually scandalize­d because they (RCMP) fought so hard to get this peace bond. They got it and what do they do? They just cut him and jettison him? That’s prepostero­us.”

Now comes Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale with the ridiculous proposal to “reach out” to those who are “vulnerable to radicaliza­tion.”

As if Islamic radicaliza­tion is some sort of Zika virus and potential jihadis are wilderness campers who can be stung by infected mosquitoes, unbeknowns­t to them.

Goodale said his government will create a new national office for community outreach and engagement that will help combat radicaliza­tion.

My fear is the same Islamists who currently work with our police forces on deradicali­zation will be influentia­l in establishi­ng this new program.

Munir Pervaiz, chair of the secular Muslim Canadian Congress, attended a few of these “outreach” programs, but says he stopped going because the entire effort was taken over by Islamic clerics lecturing police about so-called Islamophob­ia.

Elsewhere, the model presented as the gold standard of deradicali­zation is the “Counter Violent Extremism” program in the Danish city of Aarhus, from where more than 30 Muslims have left for Syria to join ISIS.

I called my friend, Naser Khader, a Danish member of parliament from Aarhus, to get his reaction to the supposed success of this program.

A Danish immigrant born to Palestinia­n parents in Syria, Khader said: “The so-called Aarhus-model is not working. Truth is, it is not much more than wishful thinking, in my opinion. I don’t believe in it. Young people who have gone to Syria to enrol with (ISIS) jihadists, then regret and return. They should go to prison, but instead we give them counsellin­g, empathy and maybe a hug.”

The one question no one dares ask any of the converts to Islam who head off to jihad is: Who converted you?

The answer will lead us to the real source of the problem — clerics who convert non-Muslims to Islam with the intent of turning them into jihadists.

A Canadian Press report Monday on the ubiquitous presence of hate literature promoting Islamic extremism in Canada’s mosques and Islamic schools provides an answer Goodale’s office will never come up with. Will it denounce jihad and renounce sharia? Goodale would be better off not blocking those of us who can offer him some serious advice. But I guess he can always rely on the FBI. Yes, Minister?

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