Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Take With A Grain Of Salt Reports Of Canadian Extremist Deaths: CSIS Head

Darpan News Desk, 08 Mar, 2016 01:07 PM
  • Take With A Grain Of Salt Reports Of Canadian Extremist Deaths: CSIS Head
OTTAWA — Experience has taught the head of the country's spy agency that reports of suspected Canadian extremists being killed overseas should be taken with a grain of salt.
 
Michel Coulombe, director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, says claims of Canadians killed fighting for the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant have in the past turned out to be wrong.
 
Coulombe, testifying Monday before the Senate defence and security committee, wouldn't comment specifically on the case of Owais Egwilla, an Ottawa-area university student whose cleric father encouraged Libyans to "take part in jihad.''
 
Published reports say Egwilla was a member of the Omar Al-Mukhtar Brigade militia — something the spy director would not confirm. Nor would he say whether the young man — or his father Abdu Albasset Egwilla, a Libyan-Canadian cleric — had been under surveillance. 
 
"I'm not saying that I doubt this person is dead," he told reporters following the hearing. "What I've said and we've seen this a number of times, people are reported as being killed, just to resurface two, three, four weeks, a month later on Twitter or Facebook."
 
Word of Egwilla's death came through social media from accounts associated with Libyan fighters. He was reportedly killed fighting government forces near the embattled city of Benghazi.
 
The situation in many failed states is chaotic and Coulombe says the agency attempts to verify extremist deaths.
 
"All I'm saying, and I'm not talking specifically this last report from Libya, we have to be really careful before jumping to the firm conclusion that somebody was killed," he said. 
 
 
Foreign Affair Minister Stephane Dion confirmed his department was aware of the report, but couldn't shed any more light on it. 
 
"We are looking at that, but I have no details to communicate," he said. 
 
About 180 Canadians are suspected of being involved in terrorist-related activities overseas, approximately 100 of whom are in Iraq and Syria, the director testified, repeating numbers that were recently updated and released.
 
An additional 60 are reportedly back in Canada after taking part in extremist activities and roughly 90 would-be jihadists are attempting to leave the country to join the fighting in Iraq, Syria and elsewhere.
 
Conservative Sen. Daniel Lang was mystified at the notion people who had potentially taken part in terrorist activities abroad or were known sympathizers are allowed to walk the streets.  
 
"My understanding is, it's against the law," he said. "Am I missing something here?"
 
Dealing with suspected terrorists is the job of law enforcement, particularly the RCMP, Coulombe said.
 
He did say, however, that much of the surveillance information gathered by CSIS does not meet the threshold of the justice system and it's up to the Mounties to build a criminal case.
 
The director said gathering evidence of terrorist activity — acceptable to a Canadian court — in countries torn by violence and civil war is extremely difficult.
 
"It's not a simple task," he said. "The RCMP would be better placed to explain the challenges."
 
Coulombe also revealed Monday that the spy service's newly enhanced powers to disrupt terrorist activity under the former Harper government's Bill C-51 have been used on a half-dozen occasions.
 
But he underlined that the "threat-reduction measures" used were carried out without the need for a Federal Court warrant and in some cases simply involved letting suspects know they were under suspicion.

MORE National ARTICLES

Petition Opposing Ontario Nuclear Waste Plan Sent To Federal Government

TORONTO — A group opposed to a plan to bury nuclear waste near Lake Huron says it has sent a petition with more than 90,000 signatures to federal Environment Minister Catherine McKenna.

Petition Opposing Ontario Nuclear Waste Plan Sent To Federal Government

Search Ends Happily For Two Backcountry Skiers Overdue In North Okanagan

Search Ends Happily For Two Backcountry Skiers Overdue In North Okanagan
Vernon Search and Rescue manager Leigh Pearson says the two are from the Lumby area, east of Vernon. 

Search Ends Happily For Two Backcountry Skiers Overdue In North Okanagan

Canada's Spy Agency Wants Ban In B.C. Terror Trial For Secrets Of National Security

Canada's Spy Agency Wants Ban In B.C. Terror Trial For Secrets Of National Security
Canada's spy agency is back in court asking that information about its involvement in a British Columbia terrorism probe be kept secret from the public.

Canada's Spy Agency Wants Ban In B.C. Terror Trial For Secrets Of National Security

Quebec Police Shoot, Kill Man Allegedly Brandishing Chainsaw Near Montreal

Deux-Montagnes regional police officers were called to deal with a family dispute early this morning and found the 52-year-old man with the motor-driven saw, which they say was running.

Quebec Police Shoot, Kill Man Allegedly Brandishing Chainsaw Near Montreal

Saskatchewan Says Refugees Taxing Resources, But No Need To Delay Arrivals

Saskatchewan Says Refugees Taxing Resources, But No Need To Delay Arrivals
REGINA — Saskatchewan Immigration Minister Jeremy Harrison says the arrival of nearly 600 refugees over the last couple of months is taxing resources.

Saskatchewan Says Refugees Taxing Resources, But No Need To Delay Arrivals

Vancouver Liable For Woman's Jail Treatment, But Restraint Device 'Justified'

Vancouver Liable For Woman's Jail Treatment, But Restraint Device 'Justified'
Provincial Court Judge Laura Bakan ruled that although the use of the hobble was justified to monitor O'Shea's safety, the situation shouldn't have escalated to the point where it was needed.

Vancouver Liable For Woman's Jail Treatment, But Restraint Device 'Justified'