Vancouver Sun

Canadian link to terrorism?

- DOUGLAS QUAN

The RCMP is looking into reports that a former Ontario university student may be connected to a deadly Islamic extremist attack in Somalia.

The RCMP is investigat­ing whether a former Ontario university student may be connected to a deadly Islamic extremist attack in Somalia’s capital over the weekend.

The National Post on Monday cited a community source as saying Mahad Ali Dhore — a former York University math and history student — had died in the suicide attack in Mogadishu.

It said the Canadian had travelled to Somalia in 2009 to join the armed Islamist group al- Shabab, an al- Qaida- linked militant group.

If confirmed, Dhore would be the second member of the so- called Somali Six known to have died.

Al- Shabab claimed responsibi­lity for Sunday’s attack — a twohour assault on the Supreme Court complex in Mogadishu, which involved six suicide bombings and two car bombs.

Several sources in Toronto’s large Somali- Canadian community told the National Post that Dhore’s family had been informed of his death. However, one reportedly questioned whether Dhore had been one of the suicide attackers, suggesting

Al- Qaida affiliates) are beginning to communicat­e between themselves far more than they used to, and, in every single case, there are Canadians who have joined them.

RICHARD FADDEN DIRECTOR OF CANADIAN SECURITY INTELLIGEN­CE SERVICE

it was possible he had been arrested and was making a court appearance when fellow al- Shabab members stormed the complex. At least 29 died and 58 were injured from gunfire and explosions.

News of the potential involvemen­t of a Canadian emerges less than two weeks after officials confirmed that two young Canadians from London, Ont., were linked to a deadly fourday siege at an Algerian gas plant earlier this year.

Somalia’s prime minister Abdi Farah Shirdon said 29 people died in the weekend attack, but a member of parliament said the death toll had reached 35, including nine attackers.

Shirdon said an internatio­nal crew of experience­d fighters was responsibl­e.

“We are concerned about the foreign involvemen­t in this attack and this is why we are working so hard with our internatio­nal partners on security and intelligen­ce sharing,” Shirdon said. “Once again we see that terrorism is an internatio­nal problem.”

Shirdon did not specify the nationalit­ies of the foreign fighters.

The National Post reported in December 2009 that Dhore, then 25 and from Markham, Ont., was among a group of young Somali- Canadian men who vanished that fall and were feared to have left Canada to join al- Shabab.

RCMP officials said Monday they were aware of media reports of a possible Canadian link to the terrorist attack in Mogadishu but offered little else.

This past February, Richard Fadden, director of the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service, told a Senate committee that al- Qaida affiliates, including al- Shabab, were “much more operationa­l than they used to be.”

“They are beginning to communicat­e between themselves far more than they used to, and, in every single case, there are Canadians who have joined them,” Fadden said.

 ??  ??
 ?? MOHAMED ABDIWAHAB/ AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? A Somali policeman walks past a burning car on Sunday in Mogadishu, after a suicide bomber attack in the regional court complex left at least 29 people dead.
MOHAMED ABDIWAHAB/ AFP/ GETTY IMAGES A Somali policeman walks past a burning car on Sunday in Mogadishu, after a suicide bomber attack in the regional court complex left at least 29 people dead.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada