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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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July 5, 2018
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Canada
is Funding and Supporting Terrorism Front Groups with Taxpayers' Money
by Tom Quiggin
Special to IPT News
July 5, 2018
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The government of
Canada plans to funnel $23 million to combat "Islamophobia,"
Member of Parliament Iqra Khalid announced
last week.
The money is an outgrowth of Canada's M-103 "Systemic racism and
religious discrimination" bill that called on the government to "condemn Islamophobia
and all forms of systemic racism and religious discrimination."
It is not clear how the money will be divided, but Islamic Relief Canada
and the National Council of Canadian Muslims (NCCM), formerly known as CAIR-CAN, are poised to receive
significant amounts.
That's a problem because both groups have been accused of supporting
terrorists.
NCCM is the Canadian chapter of the Council of American Islamic
Relations (CAIR). Islamic Relief Canada is a branch of Islamic Relief
Worldwide.
Both the NCCM (CAIR-CAN) and Islamic Relief Canada were identified as Muslim Brotherhood front groups in testimony to the
Canadian Senate in 2015.
HSBC bank, based in the United Kingdom, announced in January 2016 that it would close Islamic
Relief Worldwide's accounts and cut all links to it "amid concerns
that cash for aid could end up with terrorist groups abroad." Swiss
bank UBS did the same thing in 2012. The United Arab
Emirates included Islamic Relief Worldwide and Islamic Relief UK
on its 2014 list of terrorist organizations. In so doing, the UAE also noted
that Islamic Relief Worldwide is a part of the global Muslim Brotherhood.
Israel also has listed Islamic Relief Worldwide as a terrorist funding
organization, identifying Hamas as the intended recipient of the money. In
its own charter, Hamas describes itself as "one of the
branches of the Muslim Brotherhood in Palestine."
In Canada, the Financial Post also removed Islamic Relief Canada from its 2014 "25
Charities of the Year" because "its international arm has been
banned elsewhere (though not in Canada) for allegedly funneling funds to
the terrorist organization Hamas."
Of note, Islamic Relief co-founder and former leader Essam al-Haddad
figures prominently in a 2012 "who is who" of the Muslim Brotherhood issued by
the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. He was "elected to the
[Brotherhood's] Guidance Office ... in December 2009," and ran the
successful campaign of the Brotherhood's 2012 candidate for president,
Mohamed Morsi, the Washington Institute said. He has been imprisoned since
2013.
Al-Haddad's son, Gehad al-Haddad, is
a Muslim Brotherhood spokesman.
The case of the National Council of Canadian Muslims (NCCM) is also
interesting. As noted above, the NCCM was originally founded as CAIR-CAN.
According to its founder, Sheema Khan, CAIR's U.S. leadership "had direct control" over the Canadian chapter's
activities. The U.S. Department of State identified
CAIR-CAN as CAIR's Canadian chapter. CAIR-CAN acknowledged in 2003 that CAIR was its "parent
organization."
The United Arab Emirates in 2014 labeled CAIR as a terrorist group. A federal judge in
Dallas ruled in 2009 that the government possessed "ample
evidence to establish the associations of CAIR ... with Hamas."
In Canada, long-time NCCM (CAIR-CAN) board member, Jamal Badawi, also served on the Brotherhood's North American Shura
Council – its leadership board.
Meanwhile, Canadian MP Iqra Khalid is a supporter of Sharia and is
Salafist in her orientation. While campaigning for Parliament, she claims she led the York University Muslim Student
Association and wrote its new constitution after it took over the Pakistani
Student Association. MSA officers should "strive to adhere to the
Shari'ah," it says.
And while Khalid is uncovered in public and sports modern, Western
clothing, her MSA is Salafist in orientation. Its constitution takes an uncompromising view toward religion: "Any
innovations in religious matters or modernization will not be acceptable,
as Islam is a way of life for all times and places and hence is not subject
to being outdated or needing reform." As often noted, the Muslim
Student Association of Canada and the USA was founded by Muslim Brotherhood members.
Iqra Khalid first appeared on the public radar in 2015 after announcing
her Liberal Party candidacy for Parliament in Mississauga, Ontario. She received
a key endorsement at an Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) property. Just
two years earlier, Canada's Revenue Agency revoked the ISNA Development Foundation's charitable
status after an audit found it had given money to a Kashmiri charity
connected to the Jamaat-e-Islami terrorist group.
The decision to fund these organizations with government money raises
several questions, given their links to terrorism funding and extremism.
Why did Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government choose these
organizations, ignoring reformist Muslim organizations such as Muslims Facing
Tomorrow and the Canadian
Thinkers Forum?
Since his 2008 election to Parliament, Trudeau has supported, funded and defended Islamist groups.
He has said that ISIS fighters returning to Canada would be a "powerful voice for deradicalization." This is his
position, even though Canada has no deradicalization program and its Centre
for Community Engagement and Prevention of Violence has been without a director for years.
Trudeau further believes that it is "Islamophobic" to oppose the return of ISIS
fighters, so Canada is no longer providing the names of its returning ISIS
fighters to the United Nations committee responsible for tracking international jihadists. Canada does not try to arrest returning ISIS fighters. Few
face any consequences, even as one ISIS fighter living in Toronto openly bragged to the New York Times about
executing prisoners.
This decision to again support Islamist front groups such as Islamic
Relief and the NCCM (CAIR-CAN) is consistent with Trudeau's long-term
support for lslamist groups in Canada. Combined with other actions such as
his support for returning ISIS fighters to Canada, it adds another layer to
the discussion on whether his handling of the national security file is
competent.
Tom Quiggin is a former military intelligence officer,
a former intelligence contractor for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and
a court appointed expert on jihadist terrorism in both the Federal and
criminal courts of Canada. He is a co-author of SUBMISSION:
The Danger of Political Islam to Canada – With a Warning to America.
Related Topics: Muslim
Students Association (MSA), The
Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) | Tom Quiggin,
Canada,
M-103,
Islamic
Relief Canada, Islamic
Relief Worldwide, Hamas,
National
Council of Canadian Muslims, CAIR,
Iqra
Khalid, Essam
al-Haddad, Gehad
al-Haddad, Sheema
Khan, Justin
Trudeau
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