<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->PAKISTANI FACTOR IN CANADIAN TERRORISM
Monday, June 05, 2006
The Daily Times
http://dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=..._5-6-2006_pg3_1
Twelve Pakistanis and Bangladeshis have been arrested in Canada before they
could allegedly cause an explosion three-times bigger than the one in
Oklahoma by the American terrorist Timothy McVeigh in 1995.
The police recovered three tonnes of ammonium nitrate fertiliser from the
suspects in a Toronto suburb.
Some members of the group had allegedly attended a "training camp" north of
Toronto where they had made a video imitating military warfare. The suspects
had allegedly acquired weapons and decided upon their targets in Ontario.
The group is being charged under new anti-terrorism legislation introduced
into the criminal code in December 2001.
It has been revealed that the explosive material was planted on the would-be
terrorists as part of an elaborate sting operation by Canadian police. No
matter.
It is saddening that the Pakistanis were planning on using it for purposes
of terrorism. A Bangladeshi angle has existed ever since the Afghan jihad
and the training of Bangladeshi mujahideen in camps located in Afghanistan
and on the Pak-Afghan border.
On May 29, a Bangladeshi court sentenced two such trainees to death. The
convicting tribunal ruled that "Bangla Bhai" and Abdur Rahman were
responsible for killing two judges in a bombing in the south of the country
in November last year. The two were also believed to have been the
masterminds of a series of other attacks, including a coordinated terrorist
attack in August last year in which 500 tiny bombs exploded almost
simultaneously in 63 out of 64 districts of Bangladesh. The two were
veterans of jihad with credentials from a Karachi seminary and were now
"Talibanising" Bangladesh.
On Saturday, London police attacked a house with a 300-strong anti-terrorist
posse to catch a Bangladeshi family making a "chemical" bomb similar to the
one planned in Toronto, but thankfully found that its intelligence on the
house was faulty.
Earlier, two Muslims were indicted in London for trying to make a fertiliser
bomb. This year London also put behind bars Abu Hamza Al Masari, the
Egyptian-born former imam of the Finsbury Park mosque who had gained
notoriety for his fire-and-brimstone preaching against the "non-believers"
and for his links with terrorists.
When detectives raided the mosque in January 2003 they found an arsenal of
suspect items, including a stun gun, CS spray, chemical warfare-protection
suits, blank-firing pistols, false passports, knives, radio equipment and an
encyclopaedia of terrorism associated with Al Qaeda. Among the protesters
against his arrest were Pakistanis carrying the banner of the Al Fuqara
organisation whose chief in Pakistan was allegedly involved in the murder of
Daniel Pearl.
Canadians need to worry but anything they do will have a negative fallout
for Pakistanis needing to do business or visiting their relatives in Canada.
In 2004, Abdur Rahman Khadr testified in a court hearing in Canada that he
and his father were linked to Al Qaeda. Khadr, a 21-year-old Toronto man who
underwent weapons and explosives training at four camps in Afghanistan, said
that he had given CIA agents the names of several Canadians who had trained
at camps in Afghanistan. His father Ahmed Khadr was the central figure in
the Canada-based Al Qaeda and raised huge amounts of money for Abu Zubayda,
the Al Qaeda number three caught in Faisalabad, Pakistan.
Ahmed Khadr himself was caught in Pakistan for blowing up the Egyptian
embassy on orders from Al Zawahiri but was sprung from jail by the then
Canadian prime minister after an appeal to his Pakistani counterpart. Ahmed
Khadr was finally killed in Peshawar in 2003. Two of his sons have landed in
Guantanamo Bay.
Pakistan needs to worry too because of the image its Islamists are giving
it. Pakistan's "rich man's preacher" Farhat Hashmi, after making a lot of
money off the penitent upper crust, has landed in Canada and bought property
for her big Islamic institution. The school is the latest extension of
Al-Huda International which Dr Hashmi founded in Pakistan in 1994 after
graduating with a PhD in Islamic studies from the University of Glasgow. The
school now counts more than 10,000 graduates and she has offered lectures to
women in Dubai and London. She has moved to Toronto with her husband and
family "in response to demand from young women in the city to gain a deeper
understanding of Islam". For a nominal fee of $60 a month, students attend
classes four days a week for five hours a day. The moderate Muslims of
Canada call her Wahhabi because of her unbending doctrines.
"Hardline" political Islam has been leveraged in Canada with Saudi-Wahhabi
funds. A 2004 study found that millions of dollars were funnelled to
extremist Islamic institutions. It said Saudi Arabia spent hundreds of
millions of dollars to fund 210 Islamic centres and 1,359 mosques around the
world, including in Canada. It cited an official Saudi report in 2002 that
stated "King Fahd donated $5 million for the cost of an Islamic Centre in
Toronto, Canada, in addition to $1.5 million annually to run the facility."
The Saudi factor has since faded away but the "zone of contact" of
Pakistanis with their Arab brethren remains the mosque, facilitated by the
English language, not available as effectively in the Arab world where a
large number of expatriate Pakistanis live.
Pakistan is trying hard to clean up its international image so that it can
get its economy to move forward and its trade gap to narrow. In Canada there
is a strong moderate Muslim organisation, which protects the rights of
Muslims while opposing the extremist elements among its own community. It
has thanked the Canadian authorities for capturing the latest gang of
alleged terrorists and for their vigilance, and assured them that "such
elements do not represent the Muslim community or Islam". Its leader was
fearful that "unless we eliminate from among our ranks people with such
distorted thinking and utterly erroneous interpretations of Islam, I fear
the future of Muslim communities in the West is riddled with uncertainty".
It hardly helps if the extremist in Pakistan is pacified but expatriate
Pakistanis and Muslims remain radicalised because of the conditions in which
they live and the hardline ideologies that are still being instilled in them
by the proponents of Wahhabism. *
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