Abderrahmane Ghanem says he was detained and tortured in an Algerian prison after Canadian intelligence agencies shared information about him. Ghanem and Yacine Meziane say they've been wrongly targeted and their lives have been disrupted. (CBC)
Folks, I've been writing for five years now about the abomination called CSIS..."Canadian Security and Intelligence Services" which I believe and have said many times...and produced evidence thereto...that this "agency" is in fact a foreign mole that has penetrated the institutions and governance of Canada...sucking away Canada's sovereignty and setting it up for all kinds of criminality...false flags, terrorism, treason and even mass murder. If you doubt the veracity of what I am saying...just read the story of the Air India Bombing. This catastrophe occurred the year after CSIS was founded and activated and the investigative report into that murder of hundreds of Canadian citizens over Ireland concluded that it was a "Cascading Series of Errors" on the part of CSIS and the RCMP.
You'd think that after such a damning assessment...CSIS would be rolled up like a flea-infested carpet and tossed in the nearest dumpster. Not so. CSIS was given an expanded budget and ever since has pulled off one caper after another which gives the proverbial finger to Canada's criminal justice system, is in complete tandem with similar capers going on in the US (the Marathon Bomber being one) and Europe. CSIS is, IMO, a Western countries wide Mossad infiltration, spy network and terrorist organization. It recruits vulnerable Canadians to become patsies and do its dirty work...time after time...is found out, the cases are tossed out of court...but CSIS gets a tiny "slap on the wrist" by the Canadian government of the day and proceeds on its merry way with an ever larger budget!
Probably the most obvious case...and the one that should have ended the agencies criminal activities for good...was the Nuttall/Korody case here in BC...in Vancouver's lower mainland. These two addicts with well known and identified developmentally delayed/mental health issues were set up as patsies in a "bomb" terrorist plot. When it went to trial...the BC judge threw out the conviction on the grounds that the couple was set up by the police and security agency "a clear case of police-manufactured crime, the Judge said. As far as I know about the criminal law...to set someone up to perform a terror act is, in and of itself, a grave crime. It certainly would be if you or I did it. Well, the decision in the final appeal by the government in the Nuttall/Korody case was supposed to have come down in October. To date, there is NO final judgment and the poor souls, Nuttall and Korody are still being held to ransom by their own government. I have been watching closely for a final decision and will let readers know as soon as one is announced.
All the above preamble leads me to another similar fact situation and story recently reported in the CBC. Please read below about yet another situation where CSIS has preyed on Canadian citizens and is about to get away with it again. I will have final thoughts in comments to follow:
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"Two Muslim men from Calgary say they were willing to assist Canada's security agents with terror-related inquiries until CSIS started hounding them and shared their personal information with foreign states. Speaking exclusively to CBC News, Yacine Meziane and Abderrahmane Ghanem say CSIS and the RCMP wrongfully lumped them in with a cluster of Calgary jihadis who left to fight with ISIS in Iraq and Syria. They say were subjected to surveillance that quickly turned into harassment and eventually escalated into a full-scale disruption of their lives at home and abroad.
'My life was ripped apart.'- Yacine Meziane
"My life was ripped apart," Meziane said.
Neither CSIS nor the RCMP would comment about individual cases.
However, in a lengthy response to CBC News, CSIS said that "care is taken to ensure an appropriate balance between the degree of intrusiveness of an investigation and the rights and freedoms of those being investigated." That's not how Ghanem or Meziane see it. They're demanding that Canadian intelligence agencies help clear their names and allow them to lead normal lives.
CBC News has heard from half a dozen other Calgary Muslim men who say they've been similarly hounded by CSIS but are too afraid to speak openly for fear of backlash from security agencies. The National Council of Canadian Muslims says it has received 90 such complaints, in writing, in the past four years, and that number is probably low "because people do not know they can or should report these [incidents]," said Huda Alsarraj, NCCM's human rights officer.
The Security Intelligence Review Committee (SIRC), which provides parliamentary oversight of CSIS, says it has received a similar number over the same period of time, but the agency does not keep track of the ethnicity of complainants.
His friends joined ISIS
Ghanem returned to Canada in August after spending 13 months at the El-Harrach prison in his native Algeria. He says he was tortured while in custody. CBC is not able to independently verify Ghanem's claim, but the poor treatment of prisoners at El-Harrach has been well documented."You're in a cell with 75 people. Conditions were terrible. It wasn't very healthy," said Ghanem.
Speaking for the first time since his return, Ghanem said he is still living as if in jail. "I find it difficult going outside. I used to get out a lot," he said.
It is not a mystery how Ghanem ended up on CSIS's radar. He was close with a group of Calgary men who left Canada to go fight with ISIS — Damian Clairmont, Wassim Elhaj Youssef, Salman Ashrafi and brothers Gregory and Collin Gordon. "It felt like a family," he said of the men he met at a downtown Calgary prayer hall. "I think the main thing that kept us connected was that we were a young group of Muslims and we were trying our best to practice our faith. We were all learning about Islam, attending lectures and reading books." In 2013 he hosted the Gordon brothers at his apartment in Cairo. He says he didn't know they were on their way to join ISIS in Syria. They were both killed in late 2014.
Ghanem said CSIS agents insisted he had encouraged his friends to leave. "All the blame was put on me," Ghanem said. Ghanem's lawyer, Gary Caroline, said his client was punished for the choices his friends made.
- Calgary jihadists' associate cleared on terrorism charges in Algeria
- Key member of Calgary jihadist cluster revealed
Caroline says he has no doubt CSIS provided the Algerian authorities with information which led to his client's detention, although CBC News has no way to independently verify his assertion.
Ghanem said Algerian authorities put a confession in front of him, making him admit to being the ringleader of the Canadian terror cell in Calgary.
"When I tried to read it, I was insulted, yelled at and forced to sign," Ghanem said. "I had no idea what I was signing. It was brutal." In April, an Algerian judge dismissed the charges against him, and Ghanem was cleared to return to Canada.
Interview became personal
Unlike Ghanem, Meziane did not personally know the Calgary ISIS recruits.He agreed to meet with agents from Canada's federal counterterror security force at his home in 2014.
"The impression they gave me is that I could help," said Meziane. In a recording of that conversation obtained by CBC News, officers from Integrated National Security and Enforcement Team (INSET) questioned Meziane about the whereabouts of two Calgary men who had gone missing — cousins Hussein and Jamal Borhot.
Yacine Meziane says he wanted to help counterterror agents in their investigation, but then they started probing his private life. (CBC)
In a document Western intelligence agencies believe to be authentic, Hussein Borhot's name appeared on a one-page ISIS "visa." It contained his personal information including the cellphone number of his wife.
The cousins eventually returned to Calgary, and as far as CBC News can tell, neither has been charged with any terrorism-related offences. Twenty minutes into the interview, the questions shifted from the Borhots to Meziane's private life after agents told him he wasn't under investigation.
The agents asked Meziane for his private email address and questions like, "What do you do? Where is your family? Do you have kids? What's your Facebook account?" He became uncomfortable and terminated the meeting. Meziane said CSIS agents refused to leave him alone, constantly showing up at his home, even calling him at work. Meziane began feeling spooked and his wife was terrified, he said.
Moving to Kuwait
Wanting to get away from Canada for a while, Meziane accepted a job offer at an oil company in Kuwait. On a visit back to Canada in 2016, he said, CSIS agents were waiting for him at Calgary's airport with the same questions.- Calgary mosque tainted by radicalization to close its doors
- Calgary community leaders tackle radicalization and Islamophobia
"One of the police officers told me that I've been flagged by a foreign agency," Meziane said. "Another officer said, 'Yacine, you are in trouble. You're not allowed into Kuwait.'
He felt his only option was to return to Canada, where, he said, he had no job, no money and no place to live. "I stayed homeless the whole winter in Calgary," said Meziane.
Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale responded to Meziane's letter of complaint about CSIS. (CBC)
Meziane wrote letters of complaint to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, to the director of CSIS and to Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale. He filed a written complaint to the Security Intelligence Review Committee (SIRC). Last March, Meziane gave a deposition to SIRC but has not received a response.
CSIS shares 'threat-related' info
In a written statement CSIS said it has "a responsibility to share threat-related information with its foreign partners in order to mitigate risks to public safety here and abroad." But when sharing information, CSIS said, there are "strict controls on the use and dissemination of the information." But Caroline said he is opposed to Canada sharing information with the intelligence agencies of countries that breach human rights. "When word gets out, how much do you think Muslim men will want to help the RCMP and CSIS?" he said. Meziane says he's had no success finding employment since his return because, he believes, his name gets flagged on background checks."My question for CSIS is: what do you want? I am right here in Canada. You don't want me to work, travel, have a life? What do you want from me?"
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I can answer Meziane's question. CSIS wants to use you as a patsy in order to conform to the orders they regularly get from their handlers abroad...in the US and Israel. They want to use you and others like you to show their handlers what good little go-fers they are...how they tow the line and keep up with their fellow go-fers in the UK, Australia (the Five Eyes) and countries in the EU. These tortures you have endured and the ruination of your reputation mean nothing to them...just the "cost of doing business". In spite of notorious cases...like the Nuttall/Korody fiasco, the Mahar Arar travesty, the imprisonment and torture of several other Canadian muslim men and the abomination of the treatment of Canadian child soldier Omar Khadr, not to mention the aforementioned Air India Disaster...CSIS seems to be the Teflon agency...able to walk away from one car wreck after another...armed with a bigger budget and more powers siphoned away from the Canadian Bill of Rights and Freedoms.
If Canada is to maintain any respect in the world at large...or by its own citizens...it needs to assert what remains of its sovereignty and eliminate the ziofascist rat's nest called CSIS. Canada needs to get out of the false flag terrorism game/bidness. Perhaps that is why there is such an unconscionable delay in bringing down the final appeal court decision in the Nuttall/Korody case....if the judge's decision is upheld...and CSIS and their supplicant Police agency the RCMP are found to have "manufactured terrorism"...then perhaps the Teflon will have finally worn off. Stay tuned for that crucial decision!
from Greencrow As The Crow Flies http://ift.tt/2A9H9MV
Breaking News: 'My life was ripped apart': Two Calgary Muslim men say CSIS wrongfully targeted them - News Paper
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