Toronto 18 terror plotter released on day parole
Decision could become rehabilitation template
TORONTO — An expert on terrorism and de-radicalization said a Toronto 18 member’s release on day parole could act as a benchmark for years.
Kent Roach, law professor and coauthor of a book on Canada’s antiterrorism policy, said the string of conditions attached to Saad Gaya’s day parole might serve as a template for other convicted terrorists granted some form of parole from prison.
“This is an issue that is going to reoccur over the next decade. Although some convicted terrorists have been sentenced to life imprisonment, many others have not.
“The issue of whether they have been rehabilitated is something we will see more and more.”
Gaya, now 28, is serving time after pleading guilty to participating in a plot to bomb three Toronto targets, including the Toronto Stock Exchange, in protest of Canada’s military involvement in Afghanistan. The former science student at Hamilton’s McMaster University was arrested in 2006 while unloading a delivery truck filled with three tonnes of bags marked ammonium nitrate fertilizer. In 2010, he was originally sentenced to 12 years in prison and an appeal court increased that to 18 years.
Last week, Gaya was denied full parole but granted up to six months of day parole, which will allow him to attend school and work in the community. But he must return to a community-based residential facility at night. According to the Parole Board decision, Gaya plans to pursue a master’s degree.
Gaya’s parole is contingent on a number of factors, including mandatory religious counselling from an Imam — a Muslim religious leader — approved by Correctional Service of Canada.
Canada does not yet have a rehabilitation program focused on deradicalization, Roach said, which gives him cause for concern.
In 2014, Correctional Service Canada released three inter-connected studies into the radicalization and potential de-radicalization of inmates, but Roach said the government still hasn’t created a focused program to rehabilitate terrorists.
He said the former Harper government’s moves to prevent Imams from providing correctional services was particularly worrying.
“From a security perspective, it is important to have people who have expertise and legitimacy to try to address these misreadings of Islam that may have motivated many people who have been convicted of terrorism offences in Canada.”