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Ottawa's Harkat a terrorist, faces deportation, court rules
By Andrew Duffy,
The Ottawa Citizen
December 9, 2010 11:06 AM
LINK
OTTAWA — Ottawa's Mohamed Harkat faces deportation to his native Algeria after a Federal Court judge branded him a member of the al-Qaeda terrorist network Thursday morning.
Justice Simon Noël ruled that two cabinet ministers made a reasonable decision in February 2008 when they concluded Harkat poses a threat to national security.
The federal government has been trying to deport Harkat since December 2002 when he was first arrested on the strength of a national security certificate.
Noël said Harkat lied on the witness stand when he denied any involvement in the terrorist network.
"He has surrounded himself in layers of clouds in which he does not let any light come through," Noël wrote. "At times, his testimony has been inconsistent, not only with his earlier statements, but also in comparison with the public and closed evidence presented by both parties.
"At times, his testimony was simply incoherent, implausible if not contradictory. The Ministers have provide sufficient evidence to demonstrate that the issuance of the certificate was reasonable."
The ruling means Harkat, 42, who has lived in Ottawa since September 1995, is under an automatic deportation order.
A federal immigration officer must now assess whether Harkat faces a significant risk of torture if returned to Algeria, the country from which he fled in 1990 as a political dissident.
Harkat has said that he will be tortured or killed if returned to that country.
The ruling represents a major victory for the federal government and its security-certificate law, which was designed to rid the country of foreign-born terrorists.
Harkat is the first terrorism suspect to have his security certificate upheld by the Federal Court since the new law was introduced in February 2008.
Two others, Adil Charkaoui and Hassan Almrei, have had their security certificates quashed and are now suing for millions in damages.
Security certificates give federal authorities the power to arrest, imprison and deport foreign-born terror suspects without revealing in public all of the evidence against them.
The process has foundered until now. In 2007, the Supreme Court ordered the government to redraw its security certificate legislation, but since then, intelligence dossiers have not stood up to the new system's increased level of scrutiny.
Harkat, an Ottawa pizza deliveryman and gas-station attendant, was first arrested on Dec. 10, 2002. He has always denied any connection to terrorism.
Noël, however, found that Harkat for at least 15 months operated a guest house in Pakistan for Ibn Khattab, a Chechen terrorist. The judge also concluded Harkat visited Afghanistan, contrary to his sworn testimony, and that he had links to an Islamic extremist group in Egypt, Al Gamaa Al Islamiya (AGAI).
What's more, the judge accepted evidence from the Canadian Security Intelligence Service that Harkat assisted two Islamic extremists in Canada and maintained links to al-Qaeda members Ahmed Said Khadr, a Canadian, and Abu Zubaydah, who is now held in Guantanamo Bay.
Noël said Harkat remains a threat to national security even though time has diminished the danger level associated with him.
The judge dismissed a constitutional challenge to the security certificate regime and an abuse of process application filed by Harkat's defence team.
This is the second time that a security certificate has been upheld in the Harkat case.
In March 2005, Justice Eleanor Dawson found it was reasonable for the government to conclude Harkat was an al-Qaeda terrorist. That decision was overturned by the Supreme Court when it ruled the security-certificate process was too secretive.
A second certificate was issued against Harkat in February, 2008.
Judge Noël began hearing evidence in the case later that same year, both in camera and in public. He was presented with a significantly different case from the one heard by Dawson.
Harkat testified that he came to Canada as a refugee in October 1995 after spending five years in Pakistan as an aid worker. He fled Algeria, he said, because of a crackdown on the political party to which he belonged, the Front Islamique du Salut (FIS).
The Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) contends Harkat developed terrorist ties in Pakistan.
According to CSIS, Harkat worked as a chauffeur and errand boy at a Peshawar guest house run by Saudi-born jihadist Ibn Khattab. The spy agency also alleges Harkat did work for Ahmed Said Khadr, a Canadian member of al-Qaeda, while in Pakistan.
In Ottawa, CSIS claims, Harkat helped facilitate the movement of money and people in the bin Laden network.
CSIS presented court with transcripts from 13 telephone conversations, intercepted between September 1996 and September 1998, to demonstrate that Harkat maintained links to Khattab, Khadr and Abu Messab Al Shehre, a Saudi deported from Canada after being stopped at the Ottawa airport with a garrote, a samurai sword and a balaclava.
Harkat's defence team argued that the evidence could not be relied upon since CSIS destroyed the original tapes. Lawyer Norm Boxall said Harkat was targeted because of the fear that permeated North American after 9-11 and suggested CSIS created the concept of a "sleeper agent" to explain why Harkat lived peacefully in Canada for seven years before his arrest.
aduffy@ottawacitizen.com
© Copyright (c) The Ottawa Citizen
==============================================
Exclusive: Harkat knew al-Qaeda lieutenant, files say
Harkat denies all terrorist ties
Analysis: How terror came home to roost
CSIS tapped phone despite order
Harkat helped with logistics, but wasn't in terror cell: CSIS agent
Mohamed Harkat background stories
Ottawa's Harkat a terrorist, faces deportation, court rules
By Andrew Duffy,
The Ottawa Citizen
December 9, 2010 11:06 AM
LINK
OTTAWA — Ottawa's Mohamed Harkat faces deportation to his native Algeria after a Federal Court judge branded him a member of the al-Qaeda terrorist network Thursday morning.
Justice Simon Noël ruled that two cabinet ministers made a reasonable decision in February 2008 when they concluded Harkat poses a threat to national security.
The federal government has been trying to deport Harkat since December 2002 when he was first arrested on the strength of a national security certificate.
Noël said Harkat lied on the witness stand when he denied any involvement in the terrorist network.
"He has surrounded himself in layers of clouds in which he does not let any light come through," Noël wrote. "At times, his testimony has been inconsistent, not only with his earlier statements, but also in comparison with the public and closed evidence presented by both parties.
"At times, his testimony was simply incoherent, implausible if not contradictory. The Ministers have provide sufficient evidence to demonstrate that the issuance of the certificate was reasonable."
The ruling means Harkat, 42, who has lived in Ottawa since September 1995, is under an automatic deportation order.
A federal immigration officer must now assess whether Harkat faces a significant risk of torture if returned to Algeria, the country from which he fled in 1990 as a political dissident.
Harkat has said that he will be tortured or killed if returned to that country.
The ruling represents a major victory for the federal government and its security-certificate law, which was designed to rid the country of foreign-born terrorists.
Harkat is the first terrorism suspect to have his security certificate upheld by the Federal Court since the new law was introduced in February 2008.
Two others, Adil Charkaoui and Hassan Almrei, have had their security certificates quashed and are now suing for millions in damages.
Security certificates give federal authorities the power to arrest, imprison and deport foreign-born terror suspects without revealing in public all of the evidence against them.
The process has foundered until now. In 2007, the Supreme Court ordered the government to redraw its security certificate legislation, but since then, intelligence dossiers have not stood up to the new system's increased level of scrutiny.
Harkat, an Ottawa pizza deliveryman and gas-station attendant, was first arrested on Dec. 10, 2002. He has always denied any connection to terrorism.
Noël, however, found that Harkat for at least 15 months operated a guest house in Pakistan for Ibn Khattab, a Chechen terrorist. The judge also concluded Harkat visited Afghanistan, contrary to his sworn testimony, and that he had links to an Islamic extremist group in Egypt, Al Gamaa Al Islamiya (AGAI).
What's more, the judge accepted evidence from the Canadian Security Intelligence Service that Harkat assisted two Islamic extremists in Canada and maintained links to al-Qaeda members Ahmed Said Khadr, a Canadian, and Abu Zubaydah, who is now held in Guantanamo Bay.
Noël said Harkat remains a threat to national security even though time has diminished the danger level associated with him.
The judge dismissed a constitutional challenge to the security certificate regime and an abuse of process application filed by Harkat's defence team.
This is the second time that a security certificate has been upheld in the Harkat case.
In March 2005, Justice Eleanor Dawson found it was reasonable for the government to conclude Harkat was an al-Qaeda terrorist. That decision was overturned by the Supreme Court when it ruled the security-certificate process was too secretive.
A second certificate was issued against Harkat in February, 2008.
Judge Noël began hearing evidence in the case later that same year, both in camera and in public. He was presented with a significantly different case from the one heard by Dawson.
Harkat testified that he came to Canada as a refugee in October 1995 after spending five years in Pakistan as an aid worker. He fled Algeria, he said, because of a crackdown on the political party to which he belonged, the Front Islamique du Salut (FIS).
The Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) contends Harkat developed terrorist ties in Pakistan.
According to CSIS, Harkat worked as a chauffeur and errand boy at a Peshawar guest house run by Saudi-born jihadist Ibn Khattab. The spy agency also alleges Harkat did work for Ahmed Said Khadr, a Canadian member of al-Qaeda, while in Pakistan.
In Ottawa, CSIS claims, Harkat helped facilitate the movement of money and people in the bin Laden network.
CSIS presented court with transcripts from 13 telephone conversations, intercepted between September 1996 and September 1998, to demonstrate that Harkat maintained links to Khattab, Khadr and Abu Messab Al Shehre, a Saudi deported from Canada after being stopped at the Ottawa airport with a garrote, a samurai sword and a balaclava.
Harkat's defence team argued that the evidence could not be relied upon since CSIS destroyed the original tapes. Lawyer Norm Boxall said Harkat was targeted because of the fear that permeated North American after 9-11 and suggested CSIS created the concept of a "sleeper agent" to explain why Harkat lived peacefully in Canada for seven years before his arrest.
aduffy@ottawacitizen.com
© Copyright (c) The Ottawa Citizen
==============================================
Exclusive: Harkat knew al-Qaeda lieutenant, files say
Harkat denies all terrorist ties
Analysis: How terror came home to roost
CSIS tapped phone despite order
Harkat helped with logistics, but wasn't in terror cell: CSIS agent
Mohamed Harkat background stories