Author: Stephen Brown
Publication: FrontPageMagazine.com
Date: September 4, 2003
The arrest of twenty men in Toronto
recently may represent the break up of the largest terrorist cell
in North America since 9/11. All the detained men come from Pakistan
except one, an Indian national; and the police are still searching
for another ten members of the group in an operation they call 'Project
Thread'.
While living in Toronto, the men
showed an unusual interest in a nuclear power plant located on Lake
Ontario, police once finding two of their number outside the plant
at 4:15 a.m. The two said they wanted to go for a swim at the beach
inside the compound. The group also possessed schematics for the
CN Tower, Canadian and American buildings and law courts, and had
access to stolen radioactive material. Their apartments were also
the scenes of several kitchen fires that investigators now suspect
resulted from the making of explosives.
But most frightening were the activities
of the Indian national, Anwar-Ur-Rehman Mohammed. Mohammed was acquiring
a pilot's license from a flight school near the nuclear power plant
when arrested and had even flown over the facility during flight
training. Mohammed is also an associate of the plant's two nighttime
visitors. He arrived in Canada almost three years ago and had been
taking flying lessons ever since, first in Victoria, British Columbia,
before coming to Ontario.
It is known that five of the men
used letters from a diploma mill- type school in Toronto to obtain six-month
student visas to come to Canada, while another seven used the bogus
school to get documents to extend their stays. Some have also filed
refugee claims, an effective way to lengthen one's stay in Canada
due to the backlog of claims in the courts. One alert government
official triggered the investigation that led to the arrests after
she became suspicious about the school and its Pakistani "students."
All the arrested men have been in
Canada for several years, and police are now investigating what they
were doing during that time as well as who paid for their air travel,
living expenses, bogus documents and for Mohammed's expensive flight
lessons. As well, investigators are going through the thirty computer
hard drives seized in the arrests. Moreover, another group member
turned himself in to police this week and, fearing threats from those
already in custody, has asked to be isolated from the others.
Canada was already once the target
of a Pakistani-related terrorist plot. In 1991, five men traveling
from the United States were arrested at the Canadian-American border,
heading to Toronto to blow up a Hindu temple and cinema. They belonged
to the notorious, Pakistan-based Jamaat-ul-Fulqra organization that
was involved in several bombings and murders in America in the 1980s.
A 1998 State Department report said ul-Fuqra seeks to purify Islam
through violence, and it operates isolated rural compounds in America.
But the Canadian police are currently
investigating a link with another Pakistani terrorist organization,
Tehrik-e-Jafria, in connection with 'Operation Thread'. Tehrik-e-Jafria
(Movement of Followers of Shia Sect) is a violent, Shia sectarian
organization in Pakistan that has murdered members of a rival Sunni
extremist organization, Sipah-e-Mohammad (Army of the Prophet Mohammed's
Companions), which, for its part, is seeking to eradicate that country's
minority Shiites. Both organizations are banned in Pakistan. TEF's
leader was once a student of Iran's Ayatollah Khomeni, and Iranian
preachers are active in Pakistan's Shia community.
However, this group of Pakistani
nationals may not even represent the greatest terrorist threat that
Canada has faced this year. Last April, an Egyptian sailor died in
a hotel room in Brazil of anthrax poisoning after opening a suitcase
given to him in Egypt for delivery to someone in Canada after his
ship docked in Halifax. A Brazilian police official said the man
most didn't know what was in the suitcase, adding the matter was
probably a case of bio-terrorism.
In 'Operation Thread', police say
there are four hundred additional names in the non-existent school's
files they are checking for terrorist connections in both Canada
and the United States. Members of the arrested group had obtained
bogus documents that allowed them to travel in America between May,
2001, and January, 2002, a time period encompassing the 9/11 tragedy.
Authorities also stated last week
that a second diploma mill school in Toronto is under investigation
for possible involvement with the Pakistanis.
And while no charges have yet been
laid, it was disconcerting for ordinary Canadians to hear Muslim
organizations hurling accusations of racial profiling against the
police the day after the arrests were made. With no concern for the
security of their fellow citizens and, apparently, no memory of 9/11,
they demanded the detainees' release for lack of evidence. Two of
the twenty-one are now out on bail.
But like the radical Left after
the Cold War, none of these Muslim advocacy groups will ever step
forward, admit their error and apologize for their inexcusable conduct,
if subsequently proven wrong. They, like the Left, will simply maintain
the Big Silence until the next self-serving opportunity comes down
the pike when they will again accuse and obfuscate to everyone's
detriment.
Stephen Brown is a journalist based
in Toronto. He has an M.A. in Russian and Eastern European Studies.
Email him at alsolzh@hotmail.com.