Toronto terrorist plot foiled

DR STRANGELOVE

Registered User
Forum Member
Mar 13, 2003
27,355
51
0
Toronto, Canada
cnn.com

Canadian police on Saturday said they have prevented a major al Qaeda-inspired terror plot to attack targets in southern Ontario.

Twelve adults and five young people were arrested, authorities said.

"This group took steps to acquire three tons of ammonium nitrate and other components necessary to create explosive devices," said Royal Canadian Mounted Police Assistant Commissioner Mike McDonell in a news conference. (Watch Canadian police official describe the power of the plot -- :36)

"To put this in context, the 1995 bombing of the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City that killed 168 people took one ton of ammonium nitrate."

The detained suspects are all males, Canadian residents "from a variety of backgrounds" and followers of a "violent ideology inspired by al Qaeda," said Luc Portelance, assistant director of operations for Canadian Security Intelligence Service. (Full list of adult suspects)

The men ranged in age from 19 to 43, and all lived in Ontario, according to Canadian police. No information was released on the youths.

The targets were all in Toronto, CNN's Jeanne Meserve reported at least one source as telling her. Authorities did not release information on targets except to say they did not include the Toronto Transit Commission.

Some suspects "may have had limited contact with the two people recently arrested from Georgia," FBI spokesman Richard Kolko said, referring to Syed Ahmed, a 21-year-old Georgia Insitute of Technology student, and 19-year-old Ehsanul Sadequee.

Both men traveled from Atlanta to Canada in March 2005 to meet with three men who were the subjects of an FBI international terrorism investigation, an FBI agent said, according to an affidavit unsealed in April.

Ahmed told authorities that "during some of these meetings, he, Sadequee and the others discussed strategic locations in the United States suitable for a terrorist strike, to include oil refineries and military bases," the court paper said. (More details)

As for the suspects arrested in the Canadian sweep, "these were Canadians with Canadian targets," a Canadian official told CNN. "There is no indication they had any intent to do anything involving the U.S."

The charges they face include participating in terrorist group activity such as training and recruitment; the provision of property for terrorist purposes; and the "commission of indictable offenses, including firearms and explosives in association with a terrorist group."

"This group posed a real and serious threat," McDonell said. "It had the capacity and intent to carry out these attacks." He said the investigation was lengthy and involved about 400 officers from different agencies.

The men were arrested on Friday and will make court appearances later Saturday, police spokeswoman Cpl. Michele Paradis said. More arrests were expected, she had earlier told CNN.

The sweep was a joint operation involving most of the police forces in the Toronto area, she said.

Federal agencies including border and intelligence agents worked with the police under the auspices of the Integrated National Security Enforcement Team, Paradis said.

Such anti-terror operations in Canada are rare. It's not clear if the sweep is related to a raid in East London Friday, one of the largest there since the London transit bombings in July. That raid was carried out with the help of police and Britain's domestic spy agency, MI5. (Full story)

In March 2004 a man from Ottawa, Canada -- Mohammad Momin Khawaja -- was charged in connection with terror-related offenses that involved activities there and in London.

And Ahmed Ressam, who was convicted of conspiracy to detonate a suitcase bomb at Los Angeles International Airport during millennium celebrations, was stopped upon entering Washington state from Canada. His trunk contained explosives and timing devices.

Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff spoke by telephone with his counterpart, Canadian Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day, Saturday morning to discuss the latest events north of the border.

"We believe we have a strong posture at the Canadian border and we will continue to do so," said a U.S. Department of Homeland Security spokesman, adding that no additional protective measures were being taken.





Even in my backyard, WTF?
 

Jake DeNiro

Jakey Pups
Forum Member
Dec 13, 2001
2,629
14
0
73
DR STRANGELOVE.....not saying exactly where, but we share the same backyard. My daughter now says she'll be walking to work which is just under half hour walk to Bay.
 

DR STRANGELOVE

Registered User
Forum Member
Mar 13, 2003
27,355
51
0
Toronto, Canada
Jake DeNiro said:
DR STRANGELOVE.....not saying exactly where, but we share the same backyard. My daughter now says she'll be walking to work which is just under half hour walk to Bay.

scary shit isn't it, they were about to bomb a location downtown, unreal...
 

Jake DeNiro

Jakey Pups
Forum Member
Dec 13, 2001
2,629
14
0
73
Scary shit it is. Her and I both work downtown, she's right in the heart and I'm two streets north of her. She's really paranoid about it all and understandlingly so...... :mj09:

Take care...
 

1%er

TCB
Forum Member
Dec 13, 2005
1,625
18
0
Chasing the Next Dime...
Scum named

Scum named

CNN) -- Twelve adults and five youths were rounded up in Canada, suspected of plotting terror attacks in and around Toronto, Canadian police announced Saturday.

Officers said the suspects were inspired by al Qaeda.

They released the following names and addresses in Ontario of the adult suspects:


Fahim Ahmad, 21, of Robinstone Drive, Toronto



Zakaria Amara, 20, of Periwinkle Crescent, Mississauga



Asad Ansari, 21, of Rosehurst Drive, Mississauga


Shareef Abdelhaleen, 30, of Lowville Heights, Mississauga


Qayyum Abdul Jamal, 43, of Montevideo Road, Mississauga


Mohammed Dirie, 22, Kingston


Yasim Abdi Mohamed, 24, Kingston


Jahmaal James, 23, of Trudelle Street, Toronto


Amin Mohamed Durrani, 19, of Stonehill Court, Toronto


Steven Vikash Chand alias Abdul Shakur, 25, of Treverton Drive, Toronto


Ahmad Mustafa Ghany, 21, of Robin Drive, Mississauga


Saad Khalid, 19, of Eclipse Avenue, Mississauga

The names of the youths were not released.




Wish the Tories brought back the Death Penalty. Would let these ones get to meet their 33 virgins early!!

Jake, Wise to Stay off the TTC, but these idiots would of probably let it off in the PATH during rush hour.

Supposedly they were going after the CSIS building on Front St near the Dome and the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa.

If I ever see a guy like your Avatar in the underground I will give you the MadJack Secret Hand Signal!!lol

Anyway, here's a pic of RR to make us all remember why we love a free country!!

060602_rebecca_romijn2_le.jpg
 

Jake DeNiro

Jakey Pups
Forum Member
Dec 13, 2001
2,629
14
0
73
1%er.....Bastards!!! I'd never stay off the transit. I use it to get to work, once for work, and I walk home. All of it is street level traveling. Living downtown all my life I have never had a car or a license. Even used to take Jakey on the transit, but that's besides the point. Yes I agree 100% about the death penalty, but..... :shrug:

Thanks and take care
 

slopitch

Registered User
Forum Member
Feb 24, 2002
416
0
0
78
Milton Ontario Canada
Terrorists

Terrorists

My wife is with RBC and is in the RBC building(one of the possible targets) Often walks between there and the Front St offices
She says F### em shes not changing anything
Slopitch
 

Jake DeNiro

Jakey Pups
Forum Member
Dec 13, 2001
2,629
14
0
73
slopitch.....I'm by the RBC twice a day, and my daughter is right around the corner. I have the same attitude as your wife, I mean what the hell is someone to do. Everyone just has to be grateful that the authories are on top of it....Later
 
Last edited:

Wilson

Registered User
Forum Member
Feb 8, 2002
4,426
10
0
1813 Virginia St
1%er said:
CNN) -- Twelve adults and five youths were rounded up in Canada, suspected of plotting terror attacks in and around Toronto, Canadian police announced Saturday.

Officers said the suspects were inspired by al Qaeda.

They released the following names and addresses in Ontario of the adult suspects:


Fahim Ahmad, 21, of Robinstone Drive, Toronto



Zakaria Amara, 20, of Periwinkle Crescent, Mississauga



Asad Ansari, 21, of Rosehurst Drive, Mississauga


Shareef Abdelhaleen, 30, of Lowville Heights, Mississauga


Qayyum Abdul Jamal, 43, of Montevideo Road, Mississauga


Mohammed Dirie, 22, Kingston


Yasim Abdi Mohamed, 24, Kingston


Jahmaal James, 23, of Trudelle Street, Toronto


Amin Mohamed Durrani, 19, of Stonehill Court, Toronto


Steven Vikash Chand alias Abdul Shakur, 25, of Treverton Drive, Toronto


Ahmad Mustafa Ghany, 21, of Robin Drive, Mississauga


Saad Khalid, 19, of Eclipse Avenue, Mississauga

The names of the youths were not released.




Wish the Tories brought back the Death Penalty. Would let these ones get to meet their 33 virgins early!!

Jake, Wise to Stay off the TTC, but these idiots would of probably let it off in the PATH during rush hour.

Supposedly they were going after the CSIS building on Front St near the Dome and the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa.

If I ever see a guy like your Avatar in the underground I will give you the MadJack Secret Hand Signal!!lol

Anyway, here's a pic of RR to make us all remember why we love a free country!!

060602_rebecca_romijn2_le.jpg


Funny, those names don't sound Canadian. :nono:
 

1%er

TCB
Forum Member
Dec 13, 2005
1,625
18
0
Chasing the Next Dime...
It's Crazy

It's Crazy

Wilson said:
Funny, those names don't sound Canadian. :nono:

They are all Home Grown Terrorists. Great Job our Government has done saying that this couldn't happen in Canada and meanwhile

Grenier said a S.W.A.T. team blocked off the street around 4pm Friday and said police came out of Chand's basement apartment carrying sealed Ziploc bags.

Police have accused the group of 17 suspects of acquiring three tonnes of ammonium nitrate to make explosives. It?s a commonly used fertilizer that when mixed with fuel oil can be extremely dangerous.

"To put this in context, the 1995 bombing of the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City that killed 168 people took one ton of ammonium nitrate."



At least they caught them , but I think it will make all Canadians remember that the US are not the only ones that this could happen to!!! And hopefully be more supportive to roping all these crazies in!
 
Last edited:

GM

PleasureGlutton
Forum Member
Jan 21, 2000
2,962
5
0
123
Toronto, ON, Canada
WAY TO GO to all the police, law enforcement officials, and others who busted this group.

Excellent work. You've saved many lives, including possibly my fiancees, as she works right in the heart of the financial district in Toronto.

Many, many thanks.

========================================


Breakup of alleged terror plot in Canada unfolded like a prime-time drama
52 minutes ago

By Angela Pacienza


TORONTO (CP) - What erupted on Friday with all the trappings of a prime-time television drama had its seemingly innocent beginnings two years ago on the Internet.


Canadian teens who were spending their time on websites promoting anti-Western sentiment were being watched from cyberspace by Canadian investigators who bided their time as they waited for words to turn into action.


Those investigators soon unravelled a sinister plan to detonate three tonnes of explosive material on unsuspecting civilians in and around Canada's most populous city - an investigation that culminated Friday in 17 high-profile arrests.


It was in 2004 that tech-savvy spies noticed some teens spending more and more time reading and posting to extremist websites, sources revealed to the media. The sleuthing sparked a probe by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service which eventually uncovered an attack plan by a group of extremists.


The country's top investigators came together through an Integrated National Security Enforcement Team, or INSET, comprised of RCMP, CSIS, federal agencies and provincial and municipal police.


The cloak-dagger group is made up of more than 400 highly skilled sleuths who spent thousands of hours diligently conducting the investigation, officials said in announcing the raids.


The arrests came after three tonnes of ammonium nitrate - a common garden fertilizer that's easily transformed into a power-packed explosive charge - was allegedly purchased from undercover officers, the Star reported.


Using the cover of a misty Friday night, SWAT teams raided residential homes in Toronto and nearby Mississauga.


Investigators' efforts netted a total of 17 people - 12 men, including a computer programmer, school bus driver, and an university health sciences graduate, and five youths who cannot be identified under the Youth Criminal Justice Act.


Nada Farooq, the wife of 20-year-old suspect Zakaria Amara, described how police crashed into the multi-generational family's home as the couple played with their eight-month-old baby.


Family members were moved to the garage, she said, and her husband was taken away.


"They're not guilty," she told the media. "They're still innocent until proven guilty and yet they're taking measures as though they're monsters."


Her brother, who said he knew several of the suspects, described them as regular people - not terrorists.


A federal official said he expects some serious reflection in government and security circles about how young people raised in Canada could allegedly conspire to commit such crimes.


"Most of them went through the school system here. They're not just off the plane. So there will be some questioning going on," the official said.


"The big issue is going to be societal, that's clear."


What specific targets were being targeted by the group remains a mystery, although the Star cited a CSIS building in downtown Toronto as a possible target, along with the Parliament buildings in Ottawa.

A source in Ottawa, however, who asked not to be named, squelched talk Sunday that the heart of the federal government was a target, insisting that the alleged plotters had their sights on locales solely in southern Ontario.

Two of the men were already in custody at a prison in Kingston, Ont., after they were caught trying to smuggle weapons into Canada from the U.S.

One of the 17 men, Qayyum Abdul Jamal, 43, was known in the community for his extremist views, a source said Sunday. Jamal became the imam of a small mosque after "a tussle" with more moderate members, the source said.

"The fundamentalists threw out the moderates and took it over," said the source, who added that a federal MP became involved and complained about his "extremist" sermons.

Those arrested were brought shackled to a courthouse in Brampton, Ont., on Saturday where the police weren't taking any chances.

Sharpshooters kept watch on rooftops as spectators were scrutinized at a series of three command checkpoints by tactical officers carrying M16 assault rifles and MP5 submachine guns. Bomb-sniffing dogs were also on hand.

It remains unclear how two Americans - Ehsanul Islam Sadequee, 19, and Syed Haris Ahmed, 21, both from the Atlanta area - are connected to the Toronto group.

The pair, currently in custody, visited some of the 17 alleged terrorists, said FBI spokesman Special Agent Richard Kolko.

Court documents allege Sadequee and Ahmed travelled by Greyhound bus in March 2005 to Toronto where they met with other "like-minded Islamic extremists" to discuss terrorist training and bomb plots against military bases and oil refineries.

All 17 of the accused are scheduled to appear again in court Tuesday.
 

GM

PleasureGlutton
Forum Member
Jan 21, 2000
2,962
5
0
123
Toronto, ON, Canada
The group was "planning to commit a series of terrorist attacks against solely Canadian targets in southern Ontario.

This group took steps to acquire three tons of ammonium nitrate and other components necessary to create explosive devices. To put this in context, the 1995 bombing of the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City that killed 168 people took one ton of ammonium nitrate.The detained suspects are all males, Canadian residents "from a variety of backgrounds" and followers of a "violent ideology inspired by al Qaeda," said Luc Portelance, assistant director of operations for Canadian Security Intelligence Service. The adults ranged in age from 19 to 43, and all lived in Ontario.

The charges they face include participating in terrorist group activity such as training and recruitment; the provision of property for terrorist purposes; and the "commission of indictable offenses, including firearms and explosives in association with a terrorist group."

Authorities did not release information on targets except to say they did not include the Toronto Transit Commission.

U.S. link probed
Some suspects "may have had limited contact with the two people recently arrested from Georgia," FBI spokesman Richard Kolko said, referring to Syed Ahmed, a 21-year-old Georgia Insitute of Technology student, and 19-year-old Ehsanul Sadequee.

Both men traveled from Atlanta to Canada in March 2005 to meet with three men who were the subjects of an FBI international terrorism investigation, an FBI agent said, according to an affidavit unsealed in April.

Ahmed told authorities that "during some of these meetings, he, Sadequee and the others discussed strategic locations in the United States suitable for a terrorist strike, to include oil refineries and military bases," the court paper said. (Full story)

Such anti-terror operations in Canada are rare. It is not clear if the sweep is related to a raid in East London Friday, one of the largest there since the London transit bombings in July. That raid was carried out with the help of police and Britain's domestic spy agency, MI5.

In March 2004 a man from Ottawa, Canada -- Mohammad Momin Khawaja -- was charged in connection with terror-related offenses that involved activities there and in London.

And Ahmed Ressam, who was convicted of conspiracy to detonate a suitcase bomb at Los Angeles International Airport during millennium celebrations, was stopped upon entering Washington state from Canada. His trunk contained explosives and timing devices.
 

Jake DeNiro

Jakey Pups
Forum Member
Dec 13, 2001
2,629
14
0
73
GM said:
WAY TO GO to all the police, law enforcement officials, and others who busted this group.
Excellent work. You've saved many lives, including possibly my fiancees, as she works right in the heart of the financial district in Toronto.

Many, many thanks.

:thumb:'s to all
 

gardenweasel

el guapo
Forum Member
Jan 10, 2002
40,575
226
63
"the bunker"
WASHAGO, Ont. — ""It was the bursts of automatic gunfire that made the farmer in this tiny central Ontario tourist community think something was amiss as he fed his animals after dark.

“I feed my animals at night,” the farmer said yesterday. “So I’d be outside late at night and I’d hear the gunfire from over there, automatic gunfire. I’d hear rat-a-tat-a-tat-a-tat. I just knew there was something wrong about them. It was obvious they were doing some kind of military training.”

The sounds of war were coming from what police now describe as a terrorist training camp on an isolated property just outside Washago, about 150 kilometres north of Toronto. Late last year, residents began noticing groups of as many as a dozen men, dressed in camouflage clothing, drifting into town. The strangers drove up from Toronto in three or four vehicles at a time. They would converge at the property, staying for a week at a time, sometimes longer.

You weren’t going to tell me these guys were cottagers or even hunters for goodness’ sake,” said one woman who lived down a quiet country lane from the group’s makeshift training camp. “It was kind of hard to miss them,” she added....

ex-urban ontario dressed in camo and firing automatic weapons?....

the reason why the farmers thought those guys were out of place?....- no beer. :shrug:

seriously...big ups to the mounties and the candian security forces....

great work...well done...
 

vinnie

la vita ? buona
Forum Member
Sep 11, 2000
59,163
212
0
Here
TORONTO - Police said Monday more arrests are likely in an alleged plot to bomb buildings in Canada, while intelligence officers sought ties between the 17 suspects and Islamic terror cells in the United States and five other nations.

ADVERTISEMENT

A court said authorities had charged all 12 adults arrested over the weekend with participating in a terrorist group. Other charges included importing weapons and planning a bombing. The charges against five minors were not made public.

The Parliament of Canada, in Ottawa, is believed to be among targets the group discussed. Toronto Mayor David Miller said CN Tower, a downtown landmark, and the city's subway were not targets as had been the speculated in local media, but declined to identify sites that were.

A Muslim prayer leader who knew the oldest suspect, 43-year-old Qayyum Abdul Jamal, told The Associated Press on Monday that Jamal's sermons at a storefront mosque were "filled with hate" against Canada.

Authorities said more arrests were expected, possibly this week, as police pursue leads about a group that they say was inspired by the violent ideology of the al-Qaida terror network.

"We've by no means finished this investigation," Mike McDonell, deputy commissioner for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, told AP. "In fact, you might look at it that, really, we're just starting with the arrests. We have a responsibility to follow every lead."

Although both Canadian and U.S. officials said over the weekend there was no indication the purported terror group had targets outside Ontario, McDonell told AP on Monday that there are "foreign connections," but he would not elaborate.

In Washington, a spokesman for the National Security Council at the White House, said President Bush spoke with Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper about the case Monday afternoon, but gave no specifics of what was discussed.

"Prime Minister Harper called the president to update him on the situation involving the arrest of 17 individuals in Toronto who are charged with terrorism-related offenses," spokesman Frederick Jones said.

A U.S. law enforcement official said investigators were looking for connections between those detained in Canada and suspected Islamic militants held in the United States, Britain, Bangladesh, Bosnia, Denmark and Sweden.

American authorities have established that two men from Georgia who were charged this year in a terrorism case had been in contact with some of the Canadian suspects via computer, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the investigation is continuing.

Prosecutors have said the Georgia men, Ehsanul Islam Sadequee and Syed Haris Ahmed, traveled to Washington to shoot "casing videos" of the Capitol and other potential targets.

Sadequee, 19, a U.S. citizen who grew up near Atlanta, is accused of lying to federal authorities during an FBI terrorism investigation. Ahmed, 21, a Georgia Tech student, faces a charge he provided material support and resources for terrorism.

In Atlanta, Ahmed's lawyer, Jack Martin, told AP there may have been some connection between his client and the suspects, but he insisted it wasn't part of any terrorism plot.

"Other than having the possibility that they may have met at some point, I know of no indication that anyone believes my client had anything to do with what these guys were up to," Martin said.

A U.S. counterterrorism official said the 17 suspects in Canada are an example of a type of group that authorities have been concerned about for some time: self-organized, ad hoc cells of homegrown extremists, a development first seen in Britain.

The official, also speaking on condition of anonymity, said Canada's government rightfully considered the 17 a serious threat because there was evidence the group was far along in planning attacks.

"It came to a point where our concern for the safety and security of the public far outweighed our appetite for collecting evidence," said McDonell, the RCMP deputy commissioner.

The U.S. counterterrorism official added there was no reason to believe the group had U.S. targets in mind, but also no reason to exclude the potential.

Canadian police say there is no evidence the suspect group had ties to al-Qaida, but describe its members as being sympathetic to jihadist ideology. Officials are concerned that many of the 17 suspects were roughly 20 years old and had been radicalized in a short amount of time.

The Ontario Court of Justice released details of the charges faced by the 12 adult men arrested Friday and Saturday. The men are scheduled to appear in court Tuesday for a bail hearing.

Each is charged with one count of participating in a terrorist group.

Three of them ? Fahim Ahmad, 21, Mohammed Dirie, 22, and Yasim Abdi Mohamed, 24 ? also are charged with importing weapons and ammunition for the purpose of terrorist activity.

Nine face charges of receiving training from a terrorist group, while four are charged with providing training. Six also are charged with intending to cause an explosion that could cause serious bodily harm or death.

No information was released on the five young males arrested due to federal privacy laws that protect minors.

Canadian media have reported that the suspects attended a training camp in Washago, a rural community 90 north of Toronto. The National Post quoted unidentified residents in the wooded area as saying they heard machine-gun fire and saw men dressed in camouflage carrying equipment.

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police displayed evidence Saturday that included camouflage uniforms, flashlights, walkie-talkies and detonators, but have refused to confirm whether they were used at a training facility.

Officials announced Saturday that the suspects were arrested after the group acquired three tons of ammonium nitrate, which can be mixed with fuel oil to make a powerful explosive. One-third that amount was used in the deadly bombing of the Oklahoma City federal building in 1995.

The Toronto Star reported that undercover Mounties delivered the substance to the group in a sting operation. The Star, citing unidentified sources, said the suspects actually received a harmless substance.

Some people who know the suspects said they were astonished by the arrests.

But Faheem Bukhari, a director of the Mississauga Muslim Community Center, said Jamal, the oldest suspect, had taken to giving hateful sermons and preaching intolerance to young Muslims at a small storefront mosque in Mississauga, a city near Toronto where six of the suspects lived.

"These youth were very fun-loving guys, soccer-loving guys, and then all of sudden they were not associating with guys they used to," Bukhari told AP, referring to some of the younger suspects.

He said Jamal once told "the audience that the Canadian Forces were going to Afghanistan to rape women."

Canada has about 2,300 soldiers in southern Afghanistan to bolster Afghan reconstruction and combat Taliban militants.

Bukhari's description contrasted with the view of another prayer leader at the mosque, who said while Jamal was "aggressive" in his sermons but never promoted hatred or violence.

"I will say that they were steadfast, religious people. There's no doubt about it. But here we always preach peace and moderation," Qamrul Khanson said Sunday.
 

GM

PleasureGlutton
Forum Member
Jan 21, 2000
2,962
5
0
123
Toronto, ON, Canada
Suspects allegedly spoke of storming Parliament, beheading Harper: lawyer
2 hours, 25 minutes ago

By Gregory Bonnell And Keith Leslie

BRAMPTON, Ont. (CP) - Bombings, an armed assault on Parliament and even the beheading of Prime Minister Stephen Harper were among a chilling miscellany of possible attacks that emerged Tuesday when the alleged architects of a massive terrorist plot made their second appearance in court.


Ten men and five youths faced a packed courtroom as new details came to light about what the group was allegedly plotting before they were rounded up last Friday in what's been billed as Canada's largest post-9-11 counter-terrorism operation.


The most hair-raising of the allegations were relayed by Gary Batasar, the lawyer for 25-year-old restaurant worker Steven Chand, who described a written synopsis of Crown allegations that also included taking politicians hostage and blowing up the CBC's Toronto headquarters.


"The allegations . . . are quite serious, including storming and bombing of various buildings," Batasar told a crush of media outside the courthouse.


"There's an allegation that my client personally indicated that he wanted to behead the prime minister of Canada."


The synopsis prepared by the Crown was not read in open court or distributed to the media, making it difficult to assess how sophisticated or advanced the alleged plot and its various elements were beyond what Batasar made public.


It included allegations that the group wanted to "storm the Parliament Buildings" and that Chand "would personally like to behead Stephen Harper," he added.


Chand, bearded with shoulder-length hair, blew a kiss to supporters in the courtroom as he was led away in shackles and handcuffs.


The group of 17 - two are already serving prison terms for gun offences and didn't appear in court - also allegedly planned to behead their hostages if demands such as the withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan and the release of Muslim prisoners weren't met.


In Ottawa, Harper appeared to take the news in stride.


"I can live with these threats as long as they're not from my caucus," he joked.


Batasar took pains to assail the Canadian authorities, as well as the U.S. government and President George W. Bush, for trying to foment fear among the public.


"It appears to me that whether you're in Ottawa or Toronto or Crawford, Texas, or Washington, D.C., what is wanting to be instilled in the public is fear," he said.


"That's precisely why everyone is here today, and that's unfortunate."


Lawyer Donald McLeod, who represents 23-year-old Jahmaal James, complained of restricted access to his client, including only being allowed to speak to the accused through Plexiglas and not being allowed to have private discussions.


"Whether or not it hampers their right, it's something that we, as counsel, would like to have," McLeod said.


Lawyer Arif Raza, who represents 19-year-old Saad Khalid of Mississauga, Ont., said court was the only place he was able to talk to his client, who wasn't allowed to carry his business card.

Denying a prisoner a private meeting with a lawyer is a violation of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Raza said, adding that he'll mount a charter challenge if he doesn't get to speak with his client alone.

"I think unequal treatment, just because of these allegations, is improper."

Federal prosecutor Jim Leising told the court he doesn't have the authority to dictate how the 15 are treated at the Maplehurst correctional facility in Milton, Ont., where they're being held.

"I have nothing to do with the rules an institution imposes," he said.

Raza said there was a dearth of details in court documents about the accusations against his client, except for allegations that Khalid attended a terror training camp north of Toronto and "was apprehended at the time of the fake delivery of the so-called ammonium nitrate."

McLeod also complained that the accused were being refused their religious rights; a court order prohibits the 15 from communicating with each other.

"They're Muslim," McLeod said. "Clearly they'd like to be able to pray as a group. I'd like to facilitate that religious freedom they're entitled to."

He also complained the men in custody were not being given an opportunity to speak with their families, who packed the courtroom.

Family members who arrived to support the accused in court were met by a horde of media from across Canada and the U.S., including CNN, the Los Angeles Times and most major television networks.

Raza said family members of the accused have been shaken up by the whole ordeal, noting that their homes had been raided and "messed up" in the wake of the arrests.

They just want their loved ones to be "justly treated," he said.

The accused appeared before the court in separate groups. Of the 15 who appeared Tuesday, 14 will return to court Monday.

Chand, James, Khalid, Asad Ansari, 21, Fahim Ahmad, 21, Zakaria Amara, 20, Qayyum Abdul Jamal, 43, Amin Mohamed Durrani, 19, Ahmad Mustafa Ghany, 21, and the five youths, none of whom can be identified, are all scheduled to return to court June 12.

Shareef Abdelhaleen, 30, will return on July 4 for a bail hearing.

Ghany and Khalid also set bail hearings for later in the month, while one of the youths will have a bail hearing on June 16.
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top