Friday, April 26, 2013

Canadian Terrorists: One travelled to Iran, the other fought deportation

Terror case suspects: One travelled to Iran, the other fought deportation

http://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/terror-case-suspects-one-travelled-to-iran-the-other-fought-deportation-1.1254150

 

Published Thursday, April 25, 2013 5:17PM EDT

Last Updated Thursday, April 25, 2013 10:07PM EDT

 

One of the two men accused of plotting to derail a Via Rail train under

guidance from al Qaeda has travelled to Iran, CTV News has learned, while

the other man fought deportation from Canada.

 

Sources report that Chiheb Esseghaier, 30, of Montreal, travelled to Iran

within the past two years. The PhD student is also reported to have received

terrorist training.

 

His alleged accomplice, Toronto-area resident Raed Jaser, 35, was almost

deported from Canada in 2004 because of fraud convictions. But because he

was listed as a stateless Palestinian, Canadian authorities had nowhere to

send him.

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Photos

Chiheb Esseghaier appears in court

 

Chiheb Esseghaier makes a brief court appearance at Toronto's Old City Hall

on Wednesday, April 24, 2013.

Via Rail terror suspect in Toronto court

 

Raed Jaser, 35, appears at Old City Hall courts in Toronto, as seen in this

artist's rendition, Tuesday, April 23, 2013. (John Mantha / CTV Toronto)

 

Tunisian-born Esseghaier and Jaser are accused of planning to attack a

passenger train on the busy Via Rail route linking Toronto and New York

City. Both face charges of conspiracy to commit murder, participating in a

terrorist organization and conspiracy to interfere with transportation

facilities.

 

In addition, Esseghaier is charged with one count of having directed a

person to carry out a terrorist activity.

 

RCMP alleged Monday that the two men received "guidance" from al Qaeda in

Iran, but maintained the plot was not state-sponsored.

 

Esseghaier's father, Mohammed, told reporters Thursday his son is innocent.

 

"My son would never do this," he said from his home in Tunisia. "He's never

followed those doctrines. To kill people, it's impossible."

 

More details also emerged Thursday about Jaser's background.

 

He came to Canada with his parents and two brothers in 1993 with fake French

passports. The family said claimed they had faced persecution in Germany,

where they had also sought asylum.

 

"Ultimately we were forced to flee in fear of our lives as a Molotov

Cocktail was thrown into our home while all of us were present," his father

Mohammed Jaser said in his personal statement to the refugee board.

 

The board rejected the family's application for asylum, noting Mohammed had

remained in Germany for a year after the firebombing incident.

 

The request for asylum in Canada was denied, but most of the family members

ended up staying in the country and obtaining citizenship.

 

Although Jaser was born in the United Arab Emirates, he was listed as a

stateless Palestinian in his refugee application. His father told Canadian

authorities that he was forced to leave the area when the state of Israel

was established.

 

Jaser, however, could not become a Canadian citizen because of his criminal

record. In addition to fraud convictions, Jaser was convicted of uttering

threats. He received a federal pardon in 2009, CTV News has learned.

 

Jaser later turned to radical Islam and was put on the U.S. State

Department's counter-terrorism watch list.

 

Philip Mudd, former FBI national security deputy director and director of

global risk at SouthernSun Asset Management in Memphis, Tenn., told CTV News

that the alleged terror plot would have carried a great deal of significance

for al Qaeda.

 

"If you look at the history of al Qaeda operations, passenger trains are

viewed by al Qaeda not only as simpler targets than aircraft, but also

iconic," he said. "That is, if you see a train hit today, you're going to

remember Madrid in 2006.London in 2005."

 

Mudd noted that al Qaeda is also interested in the economic impact of its

attacks, not just death tolls.

 

Insiders tell CTV that Mounties are tracking other suspects in Canada and

more arrests are likely here and in the United States.

 

Read more:

http://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/terror-case-suspects-one-travelled-to-iran-the-

other-fought-deportation-1.1254150#ixzz2RXK7iTCp

 

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