HEADS-UP:  COURT REPORTING SHOULD APPEAR SHORTLY, WITH MUCH MORE DETAIL ON
CHARGES.
 
*       Nine of the adults accused, including Steven Vikash Chand, who
recently converted to Islam and went by the name Abdul Shakur, are alleged
to have attended a "training camp," north of Toronto in Washago. Sources
said the group donned fatigues and recorded a video imitating warfare akin
to past jihadist battles in Afghanistan, Chechnya or Bosnia. 


*       Four of the men, including Chand, Ahmad and Amara, are charged with
conducting training or recruiting. Amin Mohamed Durrani, who went to the
same Scarborough high school where the charged youths attended, is also
charged with this offence. 


But the eldest suspect, Jamal, who taught some of the group's members about
Islam and raised suspicion in the Muslim community for his fiery speeches
and association with youths, was not charged with recruiting or training. 

*       Suspects Ali Dirie and Yasin Abdi Mohamed, already serving a
two-year sentence in Kingston after being caught last August bringing loaded
guns and ammunition from the U.S. across the Fort Erie Peace Bridge into
Canada, now face additional weapons charges for allegedly acquiring the
material "at the direction of or in association with a terrorist group."


*       One of the suspects, 23-year-old Jahmaal James, allegedly travelled
to Pakistan at some point during the investigation and, said one source,
evidence is expected to be entered that claims he was in search of jihadist
training. 


*       Amara was close friends at Mississauga's Meadowvale Secondary with
Fahim Ahmad and Saad Khalid and all three received religious instruction
from 43-year-old accused Qayyum Abdul Jamal at a prayer centre in a
Mississauga strip mall. Asad Ansari and Shareef Abdelhaleen also were
regulars at the prayer centre. 
 
 
 
 
 
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Artic
le_Type1
<http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Arti
cle_Type1&c=Article&cid=1149545412024&call_page=TS_News&call_pageid=96833218
8492&call_pagepath=News/News&pubid=968163964505>
&c=Article&cid=1149545412024&call_page=TS_News&call_pageid=968332188492&call
_pagepath=News/News&pubid=968163964505
 
Inside the bomb 'plot'
Suspects cited for terrorist training 
Six are singled out in explosives plan
Jun. 6, 2006. 05:30 AM
MICHELLE SHEPHARD AND JESSICA LEEDER
STAFF REPORTERS

Government lawyers will allege 20-year-old Zakaria Amara, a university
student and father of an 8-month-old daughter, was the man who purchased
three tonnes of ammonium nitrate for bomb attacks on Canadian soil, sources
have told the Star. 

Court documents released yesterday claim Amara and another five suspects
were involved in the bomb plot. 

All 17 suspects in what police are alleging is a home-grown terrorist cell
are expected to appear in a Brampton court today for the start of their bail
hearings. 

Amara was close friends at Mississauga's Meadowvale Secondary with Fahim
Ahmad and Saad Khalid and all three received religious instruction from
43-year-old accused Qayyum Abdul Jamal at a prayer centre in a Mississauga
strip mall. Asad Ansari and Shareef Abdelhaleen also were regulars at the
prayer centre. 

This is the group, according to court documents, who will stand trial for
explosives offences, among other terrorism-related charges. The plot
involved using more ammonium nitrate than was employed in 1995 to blow up
the federal building in Oklahoma City. That blast killed 168 people. 

Investigators who had the group under surveillance for months learned of the
alleged purchase and intervened, switching the fertilizer, which can be used
to make a bomb, with a benign substance, sources told the Star. Police moved
in for the arrests after the bogus substance had been delivered. 

Cindy Andrews, a spokeswoman for Agrium Inc., a Calgary-based fertilizer
producer, said ammonium nitrate can be bought in bulk for $250 a tonne. The
price usually doubles if bought in smaller bags, she said. 

In total, 17 suspects, including five under the age of 18 who cannot be
identified under Canadian law, were arrested Friday night and Saturday
morning in raids conducted by 400 officers and led by the RCMP's
anti-terrorism task force. 

With the release yesterday of the breakdown of terrorist-related offences
each of the 17 accused are facing, more details were added to the
complicated web that links the suspects. 

The charges also provide a glimpse into the roles police allege each suspect
filled, although information on the five youths was not released. 

According to the court documents released yesterday: 

*       Nine of the adults accused, including Steven Vikash Chand, who
recently converted to Islam and went by the name Abdul Shakur, are alleged
to have attended a "training camp," north of Toronto in Washago. Sources
said the group donned fatigues and recorded a video imitating warfare akin
to past jihadist battles in Afghanistan, Chechnya or Bosnia. 


*       Four of the men, including Chand, Ahmad and Amara, are charged with
conducting training or recruiting. Amin Mohamed Durrani, who went to the
same Scarborough high school where the charged youths attended, is also
charged with this offence. 


But the eldest suspect, Jamal, who taught some of the group's members about
Islam and raised suspicion in the Muslim community for his fiery speeches
and association with youths, was not charged with recruiting or training. 

*       Suspects Ali Dirie and Yasin Abdi Mohamed, already serving a
two-year sentence in Kingston after being caught last August bringing loaded
guns and ammunition from the U.S. across the Fort Erie Peace Bridge into
Canada, now face additional weapons charges for allegedly acquiring the
material "at the direction of or in association with a terrorist group." 


Ahmad, who sources told the Star rented the white Buick the two men were
driving, but who was not charged last August, is now also charged with
allegedly helping to acquire the weapons. 

It is not clear from the charges if government lawyers will allege there is
one discernible leader. 

When asked Saturday if additional arrests were expected, RCMP Assistant
Commissioner Mike McDonell replied: "I think all of us can say with
confidence that we're satisfied this threat has been removed." 

But sources familiar with the investigation and who spoke on condition of
anonymity, say others are still under investigation and more arrests are
expected. 

While there is much speculation about international angles to the Canadian
case, there are no known examples, with the exception of the arrests this
spring of two Georgia men now in U.S. custody, who allegedly were associated
with the Canadian group. 

However one of the suspects, 23-year-old Jahmaal James, allegedly travelled
to Pakistan at some point during the investigation and, said one source,
evidence is expected to be entered that claims he was in search of jihadist
training. 

But those who know him, including Scarborough imam Aly Hindy, say that
accusation is preposterous and that James went to Pakistan to get married. 

Lawyers representing the accused and relatives say they're eager to hear
what police have to support their claims - some already vowing to sue the
government for their clients' ruined reputation if evidence doesn't support
the sensational claims now being made. 

Many are pointing to the 2003 immigration-RCMP investigation known as
Project Thread where a group of foreign students from Pakistan and one from
India were held on alleged immigration violations and classified at one of
their immigration hearings as an "Al Qaeda sleeper cell." 

The security allegations were later dropped and the students deported home,
where they said they had difficulty shaking the stigma of being identified
as terrorist suspects.


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