Cold Terror: How Canada Nurtures and Exports Terrorism to the World
by Stewart Bell ISBN: 0470834633
Post Your Opinion | | A Review of: Cold Terror: How Canada Nurtures and Exports Terrorism Around the World by Martin LoneyThe attack on the World Trade centre was a transforming moment in
American politics, putting the issue of national security at the
top of the agenda. The failures of American intelligence and the
culpability of government agencies have been at the forefront of
debate and Congressional and Senate investigations. Canada has seen
no similar paradigm shift, though as Stewart Bell clearly demonstrates,
Canada is not only at risk of terrorist attack it is a major source
of terrorist organisation and financing. Canada has done so little
to confront terrorist groups that Bell pithily observes, "Its
most valuable contribution to the war on terrorism may well be its
terrorists."
Bell, a reporter with the National Post, has been alerting Canadians
to the growing threat to their security for more than 12 years. His
eloquent account leaves no doubt that the ultimate responsibility
for Canada's failure to curb terrorist activity lies with Canadian
politicians, who have preferred to curry favour with ethnic voters
rather than confront domestic terrorists and their supporters. Al
Qaeda has provided a focus of some concern but those who pose a
threat less directly aimed at Canada have had even less trouble
setting up shop.
Sikh militants in Babbar Khalsa had a free run in Canada even as
they addressed Sikh congregations urging a holy war to seize power
in the Punjab. Bell reviews the antics of Vancouver-based Talwinder
Singh Parmar, wanted in connection with the murder of two police
officers in the Punjab. Parmar made no secret of his support for
armed insurrection, distributing photos showing him fully armed for
battle. In 1984 he told a Hamilton congregation: "Until we
hand the heads of those sinners on the tips of our swords we will
not rest." One of Parmar's associates was Ajaib Singh Bagri.
Following the storming of the Golden Temple in Amritsar, Bagri made
an impassioned speech to the founding conference of the World Sikh
Organization calling for a war on the Hindus: "Yes, there must
be our handshake with the Hindus: we will shake hands. Where? On
the battlefield." It was to be another year before the Air
India bombing occurred and 16 years before Bagri was charged for
his alleged role. Parmar, another suspect in the bombing, was killed
by Indian police in 1992. In the meantime Sikh militants in Canada
continued their campaign of terror against their enemies in India
and Sikh moderates in Canada.
Bell argues that the lack of effective action against Sikh militants
reflected the failure of Brian Mulroney and the subsequent Liberal
government to see that this was a harbinger of wider threats:
"the opening of a new era that would see the world's major
ethnic, religious and political conflicts spill across Canada''s
borders."
If Canada failed to recognize the danger posed by Sikh extremists,
it was positively hospitable to terrorists waging attacks on Sri
Lanka. Canadian newspapers and magazines warned of the growing
number of trained Tamil Tiger militants who had been admitted into
Canada (10,000 according to a 1996 Maclean's report) and the growth
of terrorist-related crime in Toronto's Tamil community. For their
part Canadian politicians showered Tamil organisations with money
and vied to address Tamil rallies. If the Sri Lankan government had
willingly hosted thousands of terrorists intent on the break-up of
Canada and had stood by while millions of dollars were raised to
fund terrorist enterprises in Canada Canadians would have been
outraged. That is precisely the role Canada played in aiding Sri
Lankan terrorists. Bell describes a "Victory Celebration"
at Queen's Park organised by the Canadian Branch of the Tamil Tigers
and attended by Liberal MP Jim Karygiannis, whose Scarborough-Agincourt
riding includes a large Tamil population. Karygiannis is a regular
at such events. In May 2000, then finance minister Paul Martin and
minister of international cooperation Maria Minna, attended a dinner
hosted by the Federation of Associations of Canadian Tamils (FACT)
even though they had been explicitly warned that it was a front
organization for the terrorist Tamil Tigers. Looking at the Queen's
Park rally Bell wonders how a known terrorist organization can hold
a rally at the provincial legislature addressed by an MP from the
national governing party. But that is in many ways an apt illustration
of Canada's role in hosting terrorists.
Jean Chretien was particularly assiduous in wooing ethnic voters.
The murderous Khadr family has been much in the news recently;
Bell's book helpfully reminds us that the elder Khadr, who immigrated
to Canada from Egypt, was once a favoured client of Canada's
development agency. CIDA provided funds to Human Concern International,
though the organization's humanitarian mission took second place
to its role in supporting the mujahadeen in Afghanistan. An intimate
of Osama bin Laden, the Egyptian-born Khadr was arrested in Pakistan
following an attack with a truck packed with explosives on the
Egyptian embassy in Islamabad, in 1995. CSIS, which had been
monitoring Khadr's activities, was not surprised but this proved
no deterrent to Prime Minister Chretien. Responding to a lobby by
Canadian Muslim groups, Chretien raised the Khadr case with Pakistan's
then Prime Minister, Benazir Bhutto, during a state visit in early
1996. Three months later Khadr was released and returned to jihad.
He was killed in October 2003 in a skirmish with the Pakistani army.
Bell has written a courageous and carefully researched indictment
of the failures of successive Canadian governments to confront the
threat of terrorism. It will be extraordinarily difficult to reverse
this trend. Terrorist groups now have deep roots in Canadian soil.
Our immigration and refugee determination system has proved porous
to those who threaten our safety and incapable of removing even the
most vicious. Bell cites the attempt to deport a Tamil Tiger leader
and an Iranian government hit man; no less than eight groups
intervened on their behalf before the Supreme Court, none intervened
to insist that Canada cease being the destination of choice for
terrorists.
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