Vancouver Sun

Man on terror peace bond had assault rifle

- STEWART BELL

TORONTO • A Toronto man arrested in April due to concerns he might engage in terrorism was the registered owner of an AR-15-type assault rifle, according to details disclosed at an Ontario court hearing Friday.

How Kadir Abdul was able to legally own a restricted weapon remains unclear. The RCMP and Toronto police declined to comment. Police have not been able to locate his Windham Weaponry semiautoma­tic rifle.

Five months ago, the 27-year-old was detained in the eastern Turkish city of Adana on suspicion he was trying to enter Syria. He was returned to Toronto and is the subject of a terrorism peace bond that restricts him from communicat­ing with Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

In the Ontario Court of Justice, prosecutor Matthew Giovinazzo revealed that after Abdul left for Istanbul on March 23, police executed a search warrant at the apartment he shared with his family in an attempt to find his assault rifle.

They did not find it, but Abdul’s father, Mohammad Uddin, told investigat­ors after his son’s departure he had broken the restricted weapon into pieces and thrown them down the apartment garbage chute.

Uddin also said he had destroyed his son’s firearm possession and acquisitio­n licence. He was charged with two firearms offences on May 19, including failing to report “having destroyed a restricted firearm.”

On Friday, Uddin, 57, pleaded guilty through a Bengali interprete­r.

“Mr. Uddin in his mind was trying to do something positive, which wasn’t done in the right way,” his lawyer, Omer Chaudhry, told the court.

But the Crown said Uddin had disposed of the weapon so that it would not be discovered and he was fortunate police did not consider his conduct obstructiv­e.

“There are clearly concerns from the federal government with the accused’s son,” Giovinazzo said.

Asked outside the courtroom why he had owned an assault rifle, Abdul did not respond.

“He’s not going to answer any questions,” Chaudhry said.

The case was scheduled to return to court on Sept. 23 for sentencing.

As Canadians debate how to respond to violent extremism after the Aug. 10 police killing of an ISIL supporter in Strathroy, Ont., as he was allegedly about to commit a suicide bombing, Abdul’s case raises more questions.

The horrific Orlando, Fla., nightclub attack by an ISIL supporter in June led to debate in the United States over how the gunman was able to legally purchase assault-style weapons despite having been investigat­ed by the FBI over alleged links to terrorism.

In Canada, firearms licensing is administer­ed by the RCMP. Licences can be refused or revoked if the holder is considered a risk to others. “Continuous” screening is conducted “to identify any public safety risks,” according to the RCMP website.

“It could very well have been missed,” said Stephanie Carvin, an assistant professor at the Norman Paterson School of Internatio­nal Affairs at Carleton University. The terrorism and security researcher also said that even if police have suspicions, they do not necessaril­y have the right to deny someone a firearms licence.

Last year, federal immigratio­n officials deported Muhammad Aqeeq Ansari for belonging to a Pakistani terrorist group. Police had raided a house in Peterborou­gh, Ont., where he had stockpiled a dozen legally owned firearms and ammunition.

It’s unclear when Abdul obtained his firearms licences, but even his home address should have set off alarms.

According to leaked ISIL documents smuggled out of Syria by a defector, a Canadian named Malik Abdul joined the terrorist group in July 2014. The contact number listed on his ISIL registrati­on form matches a land line in Kadir Abdul’s build- ing listed to “M. Uddin.” Malik is believed to have since died in Syria.

Under what Giovinazzo called “peculiar circumstan­ces,” Abdul left Canada in March. He was arrested March 31 in Adana, about 200 kilometres from the Syrian border, with another Canadian, Samuel Aviles, Turkish officials said.

The Turkish officials, who asked not to be named, told the National Post their government was unaware of a Canadian police investigat­ion into the pair at the time and that the arrests were conducted after a probe by their own intelligen­ce services.

They declined to discuss why the two travellers had aroused suspicions. The Canadians were detained for two weeks because of concerns they intended to enter Syria. They returned to Toronto on April 15, the officials said.

The RCMP arrested them when they arrived at Pearson airport and sought terrorism peace bonds against them.

Abdul agreed to the terms of a peace bond on July 15. He cannot possess a passport or weapons, must stay off the Internet except under supervisio­n, and cannot “associate or communicat­e” with ISIL or Jabhat al-Nusrah, the former al-Qaida faction in Syria.

THERE ARE CLEARLY CONCERNS FROM THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.

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