samedi 18 juillet 2015

Adil Charkaoui and Abousfian Abdelrazik Plot to blast Airplane - Montreal to Paris Air France

Adil Charkaoui and Abdelrazik plot - blast Airplane Air France
Still a Canadian citizen
According to the Charter of Rights and Freedoms of Quebec, the government should have done a reasonable accommodation by providing all explosive devices, according to the prophet, it is a personal and rational decision according to our Québécois ministers. When the deportation of criminals who enjoy the favors of Canadians without impunity. During their deportation can you send along a few Quebec ministers in Saudi
Arabia's plan:to blow up a plane using a keychain full of explosives. The target an Air France or any other airline serving the Hexagon, from Montreal.
Known for their fighting against the Canadian government had treated them as terrorists, Adil Charkaoui and Abdelrazik have plotted to blow up a aircraft in flight between Montreal and France, according to an encrypted conversation the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) had intercepted in summer 2000.
Adil Charkaoui and lawyers Abdelrazik categorically deny this information, contained in a document classified "secret" that La Presse has obtained.
Abdelrazik's lawyers say that the document comes at a critical moment in his efforts to have his name removed from the list of individuals associated with Al Qaeda established by the Council UN Security. "The fact that this information area do now is very suspect. Looks like we're trying to sabotage the withdrawal of his name from the list, "growls Mr. Paul Champ. His client, who was detained in Sudan for six years, including several years in prison, is suing Canada for $ 27 million.
Adil Charkaoui, which claims 25 million for its part in Ottawa estimates that Canada is engaged in a campaign defamation by disclosing secret reports. "It's really anything, I'm really amazed." His lawyer, Johanne Doyon, said that two judgments rendered in 2009 by the Federal Court stated that the evidence to date does not demonstrate the fear that Adil Charkaoui commit a crime.
According to excerpts of the conversation cited in the document, Adil Charkaoui and Abdelrazik have discussed in the summer of 2000 of a plan to attack a flight to France from Montreal. "We could save us all on the same day and each person separately embark. There would be two in front, two in [inaudible] and two behind. Six in all, "would have exposed Charkaoui.


When Abdelrazik judge the" dangerous "project, Charkaoui responds thinking of something" easier "to use an explosive hidden in a keychain. "It's something very pure, 100%. Launches it on the plane and the whole plane jumps ", then told Charkaoui Abdelrazik.
The document states that" the context and content of the conversation give the impression that Charkaoui and Abdelrazik were planning to attack a plane.
"Thenote four pages, written in July 2004, was intended primarily to inform Transport Canada of the impending release of Abdelrazik was arrested in 2003 by Sudanese authorities. The Press has determined that three of the four recipients of the document were responsible for the security or intelligence to Transport Canada. The fourth, however, has been identified.
It was impossible to authenticate the document by CSIS, which nevertheless asked, for security reasons, the names of its employees therein are kept secret. A former part of the Service has meanwhile confirmed to La Presse that the signatory of the letter was indeed responsible for the fight against terrorism in summer 2004.
Charkaoui, which provides Abdelrazik is a mere knowledge, said he was surprised that there is a transcript of the conversation that CSIS would have intercepted. At his trial, CSIS has refused to give a copy of it on the ground that the registration had been destroyed and that none existed transcription.


Traces of explosives
Thedocument obtained by La Presse contains several potentially incriminating information for Abdelrazik, born in Sudan in 1962 and came to Canada in November 1990. CSIS says he discovered in his vehicle during a search in October 2001, traces of RDX, a product that is a component of many explosives military type. The origin of the substance has not been determined.
Why not be prosecuted, then? "If you bring this evidence in court, the question is," How you got that? " Obviously, someone entered his car. Does he have a search warrant? "Said Michel Juneau Katsuya, a former CSIS intelligence officer. This is the difference between secret services and police, shows the former officer, the former do not have the burden to present evidence in court.
CSIS said to have the original Sudanese in his sights since 1996 because of its links to "Sunni extremists from North Africa." Among his contacts considered suspects in the document include among other Adil Charkaoui, imprisoned at the time under a security certificate, and Fateh Kamel, also imprisoned at the time in France for his role as leader of a trafficking false documents to terrorists.


The survey indicates that Abdelrazik CSIS would have led in 1997 to a camp of Al Qaeda called Khalden. The one more nicknamed "the Sudanese" have helped others become terrorists to attend. Among these is Ahmed Ressam, who was arrested in 1999 at the Canada-US border as he was about to carry out an attack at Los Angeles International Airport. "Abdelrazik provided phone number in Pakistan of al-Qaida lieutenant Abu Zubaydah!", It said. At the trial of Ressam, the Sudanese simply said to have rubbed shoulders in Montreal.
CSIS said then to have discovered that Abdelrazik had traveled to Chechnya, from autumn 1999 to summer 2000, to participate in the jihad against the Russian army. "Abdelrazik has often expressed a desire to die a martyr," says the document.
Upon his return to Montreal, the Sudanese have been visited by two Canadian naturalized Tunisians, Abderraouf Jdey and Faker Boussora.


But both are actively sought by the FBI since September 11, 2001 a 5 million reward being offered for information leading to the capture of one or the other. Jdey had been tipped to take part in the attacks on the World Trade Center, the report of the US commission investigating the attacks.
CSIS said he was informed from September 10, 2003 Abdelrazik was arrested by Sudanese authorities and imprisoned in Khartoum. Yet it was not until 2008 that the case of the man was released after he had taken refuge in the Canadian embassy in Sudan, where he was held for a year. The Federal Court finally forced Ottawa to repatriate the man in the summer of 2009, estimating that his rights had been violated.


To hear the course Abdelrazik, Michel Juneau Katsuya said why the Sudanese remained in the crosshairs of service information. "We never caught with a gun in hand, a corpse at his feet, he illustrates. But the fact that a person constantly reappear on the radar, it justifies further investigation. This is not just a neighbor who reported him for revenge after a dispute over a fence. These successive events.
"TheUnited States has long claimed to Canada with information on Abdelrazik to accuse him, what Canada has always refused. The document obtained by La Presse also marked "Secret Canadian eyes only».


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