"Innocence Lost"
... or is it Canada must now be made aware of the price for supporting the Terror State of Israel?
Friday’s arrests of 17 terror suspects may have marked the end of Canada’s innocence.
At one time Canadians may have felt immune to the threat of terrorist attacks, but experts believe some of the federal government’s recent policies, including sending troops to Afghanistan, have put Canada on terror target lists.
“Canadians have to realize that they're now in the big league and on the firing line,” Eric Margolis, an expert on foreign affairs and contributing foreign editor for Sun Media, told CP24.
“There's growing concern in the public. I hear it all the time, about the foreign policy of Canada. What are we doing in Afghanistan? If the war gets worse in Afghanistan, do we find ourselves in the same spot as the United States, with 1.5 billion Muslims around the world angry at us?”
I wonder if these Muslim vengeance squads were planning to payback the kikes in Montreal for dragging another white nation into Israel's terror campaign?
This looks like just the beginning. With all the 3rd worlders running around loose in Canada, things may really heat up for the Zionists & their treasonous supporters.
More on the 1965 kike-imported, North American Semite Wars-
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/04/world/americas/04toronto.html?pagewanted=2&ei=5094&en=58798ee2c44c6f76&hp&ex=1149393600&partner=homepage
The F.B.I. issued a statement on Saturday saying there was a "preliminary indication" that some of the Canadian subjects might have had "limited contact" with two people from Georgia who were recently arrested. Those two were Ehsanul Islam Sadequee, 19, an American of Bangladeshi descent [color="Red"] (I AM an American!) , and Syed Haris Ahmed, 21, a Pakistani-born American. [color="blue"](I AM an American!)
The others were identified as Fahim Ahmad, 21; Zakaria Amara, 20; Asad Ansari, 21; Shareef Abdelhaleen, 30; Qayyum Abdul Jamal, 43; Mohammed Dirie, 22; Yasim Abdi Mohamed, 24; Jahmaal James, 23; Amin Mohamed Durrani, 19; Steven Vikash Chand, alias Abdul Shakur, 25; Ahmad Mustafa Ghany, 21; and Saad Khalid, 19.
Anser Farooq, a lawyer from Mississauga who is representing five of the defendants, said a lack of information at Saturday's court hearing made it difficult to assess the case brought by the police.
...said that Mr. Jamal, the oldest of the suspects, is a well-known and fiery figure in the Toronto area's South Asian community, and that he was the imam of the Ar-Rahman Quran Learning Center, a mosque in a rented industrial building in Mississauga.
The Toronto Star reported that in 2004 the intelligence agency began monitoring Internet exchanges, some of which were encrypted. According to the newspaper, the training in camps took place north of Toronto. Members of the group, according to that account, often visited a popular Canadian chain of doughnut shops to wash up following their training sessions.
[color="Blue"]..."These individuals were allegedly intent on committing acts of terrorism against their own country and their own people," (PAKISTAN OR SAUDI?) Mr. Harper said in a statement. "Today, Canada's security and intelligence measures worked."
The media up in Canada is really going to have it's hands full with the damage control on this one.........oye vey........vat to do........
It's actually kinda funny. CSIS only got off their lazy butts and decided to do something about these kids because the kids were threatening to blow up the CSIS office. These kids had been hanging around the CSIS office, doing amateur 'surveillance' of the Toronto CSIS office building and at least one kid had managed to infiltrate the basement of the 'ultra-secure' CSIS building.

CSIS is quite willing to sit back and see what happens when a pipe-bomb is sent to Ernst Zundel. CSIS had direct knowledge of where the pipe-bomb originated and allowed it to be sent through Canada Post and warned it's own personnel NOT to open any package addressed to Zundel.
CSIS brags that they are the political police for Canada.
"Israel's values are Canada's values" Canadian PM
"An attack on Israel is an attack on Canada" Canadian PM
It's a nog riot. We need more of them flown in right away to make society better.
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-canada5jun05,0,3853176.story?coll=la-home-headlines
They are residents of Canada "for the most part," police said on Saturday. Their ethnic or national origins include Somali, Egyptian, Jamaican and Trinidadian.
Looks like this 'anti-terrorist operation' created some undesirable effects.
http://www.pulse24.com/News/Top_Story/20060604-005/page.asp
http://www.pulse24.com/News/Top_Story/20060604-006/page.asp
Alex Linder: "Want to rebel White teen? Become a White Nationalist."
RACE IS NOT SKIN COLOR. LOOK HERE
The latest is ZOG has been playing these people for 2 years, & finally *brought this out now because they do not want the Security Certificate law struck down. They [CSIS] are the ones who supplied the fertilizer [bomb making material] to these people.
If this law is struck down, I don't see how they can get away with not being forced to have Ernst Zundel returned. The law that removed him will no longer be valid, they would be forced to start from scratch [if they so choose] in their dealings with him.
My interpretation of this is, it is a sort of [but not quite] version of 9/11. A classic false flag operation so ZOG can get what they want.
*I got this info from watching a late broadcast of a Vancouver, B.C. t.v. station news.
Twenty-five year old "restaurant worker", esteemed-up MusliMud had big plans to personally behead prime minister of Canada and take over all CBC broadcasts. Talk about super esteemed-up! And smart too! ...All in an afternoon's work. Maybe mix Kenau Reeves, with a little darkie makeup, can do the film.
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1149630613348&call_pageid=968332188492


http://www.canada.com/topics/news/national/story.html?id=8bbd6243-8ac7-4ee0-8f43-037a522a7f41&k=4419

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/060607/photos_ca_afp/7fc7927b5900389677e43a407164d51b
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20060607/D8I32AAG1.html
Canada Plot Allegedly Involved PM Attack
Jun 6, 8:59 PM (ET)BRAMPTON, Ontario (AP) - Some of the 17 Muslim men accused of plotting terror bombings in Canada also planned to storm Parliament, take hostages and behead the prime minister and other leaders, according to accusations revealed Tuesday by the lawyer for one of the suspects.
Authorities further allege that the suspect, Steven Vikash Chand, plotted to take over media outlets, including Canadian Broadcasting Corp., his attorney said after a brief hearing at the Ontario Court of Justice.
Specifics of the charges against the other suspects were not released, but Chand's lawyer, Gary Batasar, asked that the allegations against his client be read in court. He told The Associated Press later that others face similar accusations, but did not say who or how many.
An eight-page document prepared by the prosecution summarzing the charges against all the suspects was not read in open court or distributed to the media, making it difficult to assess how sophisticated the alleged plot was or its progress.
But the purported plot to take political leaders hostage and behead them if Muslim prisoners were not freed and Canada did not pull its 2,300 troops out of Afghanistan added a chilling dimension to a case that has led U.S. authorities to toughen security along the border and unsettled Canada's large Muslim community.
Other defense attorneys declined to discuss the detailed charges. Batasar told AP that other suspects were facing similar allegations.
"It's just generally speaking that the allegations are against my client as well as the other parties," he said. "That's what all the parties are facing."
"The only reason I'm coming out and saying this is that my client is innocent of the charges; he protests his innocence and that's not being heard," Batasar added.
Police say they expect more arrests, and intelligence officers are probing whether 12 adults and five juveniles arrested over the weekend had any ties to Islamic terror cells in the United States and five nations in Europe and Asia.
Chand, a 25-year-old restaurant worker from Toronto, was one of 15 suspects who made brief court appearances Tuesday. They were held behind a glass enclosure, brought in as groups of four or five, chained together in ankle shackles and handcuffs.
Chand, bearded with shoulder-length hair, blew a kiss to supporters as he was led away as formal bail hearings for him and the 14 others were postponed until at least Monday.
"There's an allegation apparently that my client personally indicated that he wanted to behead the prime minister of Canada," said Batasar. "It's a very serious allegation. My client has said nothing about that."
Speaking outside the courthouse, Batasar said the charges were based on fear-mongering government officials.
"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.
He also suggested that Prime Minister Stephen Harper, who expressed happiness at the arrests, should "keep out of the case."
In Ottawa, Harper appeared to take the alleged beheading threat in stride. "I can live with these threats as long as they're not from my caucus," he joked.
The Ontario Court of Justice in Brampton, a small city just west of Toronto, had said earlier that the suspects faced charges that included participating in a terrorist group, importing weapons and planning a bombing. The specific details were made public Tuesday.
Lawyers and family members said they were being given too little information about the case, and charged that the suspects' rights were not being respected.
Rocco Galati, a lawyer for suspect Ahmad Mustafa Ghany, 21, told the judge that his client's constitutional rights had been violated because he was only able to interview him in the presence of an armed guard.
"The right to private counsel was afforded even at Nuremberg," Galati said.
Outside the court, Donald McLeod, a lawyer for Jahmaal James, 23, also 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.
Arif Raza, who represents Saad Khalid, 19, said he had never been allowed to speak to his client and was not even allowed to slip him his business card so Khalid could attempt to call the lawyer from the Maplehurst Correctional Center outside of Toronto.
U.S. Ambassador David Wilkins praised Canadian authorities.
"We appreciate the swift and effective action taken by Canadian law enforcement officials," Wilkins said in Montreal. "They stepped in decisively and I think helped defuse a very dangerous situation. No country is immune to terrorism and we frankly applaud their swift, decisive, heroic efforts."
The U.S. Border Patrol, meanwhile, put agents on high alert along the 4,000-mile border and stepped up inspections of traffic from Canada.
Some American commentators and politicians have accused Canada of having a lax immigration policy and suggested building a fence along the border. But Harper told Parliament on Tuesday most Americans admire Canada for "our shared concern about the security of this continent."
The case has stunned many Canadians, who have not experienced such a major anti-terrorism case since security measures were intensified after the Sept. 11 attacks in the United States.
"It's breathtaking that this is going on in Canada," International Trade Minister David Emerson told the CBC. "To see the homegrown nature of it is shocking to me."
Police say there is no evidence the suspect group had ties to al-Qaida, but describe its members as sympathetic to al-Qaida's violent jihadist ideology. Officials are concerned that many of the 17 suspects are about 20 years old and became radicalized in a short amount of time.
Officials announced the arrests Saturday, saying the sweep was ordered 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 12 adult suspects all are 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 are charged with intending to cause an explosion that could cause serious bodily harm or death.
More links here: http://www.vnnforum.com/showthread.php?t=34370
Alex Linder: "Want to rebel White teen? Become a White Nationalist."
RACE IS NOT SKIN COLOR. LOOK HERE
Toronto Terrorist Ringleader Has Military Connections
The much vaunted Toronto terrorist plot sank deeper into the abyss of absurdity late Wednesday when it was revealed that the alleged ringleader of the cell, Steven Vikash Chand, was a former Canadian soldier.
CBC News reports,
"The lawyer for Steven Chand, also known as Abdul Shakur, said Tuesday that his client is accused of wanting to storm Parliament, behead the prime minister and attack a number of sites, including the CBC building in Toronto.
A newspaper report on Wednesday said Chand had been a member of the Royal Regiment of Canada, a reservist unit, and that he had been given weapons training.
Military confirms connection
The Toronto Star said the military confirmed, but downplayed, Chand's military connection."
In every high profile case that we have studied, terrorist links to security and intelligence services as well as the military are uncovered.
From the evidence it is starting to appear that Chand was the kingpin for a government entrapment program that sought to manufacture a terrorist alert by creating a de facto terrorist cell.
Credit this to DrewJ at SF.
These kikes who thought this up are getting sloppy, they must have realized this would come out? This story is getting better with each passing day.