Press Release
November 21, 2003
Today, six B.C. groups sent the following letter to the Honorable Wayne
Easter, Solicitor General of Canada, regarding his announcement last
week about the banning of three Palestinian organizations. They
stated: "We…denounce this biased and politically motivated
announcement, the timing of which…was highly questionable." The
groups were Canada
Palestine Association, International Solidarity Movement-Vancouver, No
One Is Illegal-Vancouver, Palestine Community Centre, Palestine
Solidarity Group and Stopwar.ca. Please find more relevant
articles below about the banning of Muslim, Palestinian groups.
Dear Mr. Easter,
The recent banning by the Canadian government of three Palestinian
organizations, including the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine (PFLP) and the Palestine Liberation Front (PLF), is just the
latest example of this government's support for Israeli aggression,
occupation and injustice against the Palestinian, Arab and Muslim
peoples. It is also an extension of the U.S. anti-Palestinian,
anti-Arab and anti-Muslim policies that have been implemented since
September 11, 2001.
We, as groups that support Palestinian rights, denounce this biased and
politically motivated announcement, the timing of which, just before a
governmental transfer of power, was highly questionable. We
believe that such a move will most likely increase the hatred in the
Middle East toward the western world. Western governments, led by
the U.S., are already perceived as being interested in only controlling
the region and its resources, and as callous powers that are imposing
despotic dictatorships on the people of the Middle East, dictatorships
that are acting as puppets for the West with no regard to human rights,
democracy or freedom.
The banned organizations are part of the Palestinian liberation
movement, recognized not only by the UN, but also by the majority of
world public opinion. These organizations, despite differences in
tactics, are part of the Palestinian struggle for freedom, liberation
and democracy and two of them are long-time members of the Palestine
Liberation Organization (PLO).
While 59 per cent of European public opinion considers Israel the main
country on the planet that threatens world peace, the Canadian
government rewards Israeli aggression by striking at the "enemies" of
Israel. The Canadian government is also continuing its economic support
of Israel through the Canada-Israel free trade agreement, and the
financial support and tax-deductible status the Zionist organizations
enjoy and use, even though this helps the illegal settlements.
The political support of the Canadian government is long standing, goes
back to even before the creation of the state of Israel, and is
well-documented at the UN where Canada, alongside the U S, always
protected Israel from any meaningful resolution that would hurt it
economically or politically. These policies are motivated by the
self-interest of our government's politicians, who, in this respect,
would seem to have no regard for international law, human rights or
morality.
Israel, since before its official inception, has recruited Canadians
(against Canadian Law, the Foreign Enlistment Act, and under the noses
of successive Canadian governments) to go and participate in the
killing of Palestinians and Arabs.
Some Canadian Zionist papers even boast about this and give recruitment
figures. Israeli death squads have assassinated people, including
Canadians, all over the world. The Israeli Mossad has used Canadian
passports and Israeli agents have posed as Canadians to recruit
Palestinian informants and collaborators.
Israel, its security agencies, its military and the settlers are the
ones who should be put on the terrorist list, if Canadian foreign
policy is indeed evenhanded. Amnesty International has charged
Israel with "war crimes" in its recent actions in the Rafah area of
Gaza. Where is our government's action to respond to these
outrages?
The Palestinians and their children are being terrorized daily, their
homes and fields are being destroyed, their leaders are being murdered
without any due process and their lands are being stolen. Israeli
warplanes and tanks are attacking Palestinian civilian areas, killing
the civilian population, including young children. Collective
punishment is terrorism, building the Apartheid Wall is terrorism. So
who should be on the terrorist list?
The Canadian government's banning of these organizations gives a
license to de-legitimize the Palestinian struggle and its Canadian
support base. This will lead to further persecution and fear
amongst Canadian supporters and escalate the racism, stereotyping and
unwarranted arrests against many Palestinian and Arab-Canadians.
These Canadian government policies will endanger the strategic
interests of the Canadian people for generations to come and do a
disservice to international law and human rights. We, as
organizations concerned for justice for the Palestinian people and for
peace in the region and the whole world, urge the Canadian government
to stop going down the path of McCarthyism at home and of supporting
aggression, occupation and human rights violations abroad.
We also pledge our support to the just struggle of the Palestinian
people for freedom and self-determination, and pledge to expose the
Canadian government's immoral and inhuman stand against the
Palestinians to the Canadian public.
For further information, please contact Hanna Kawas at 604-522-3733 or e-mail
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
September 7, 2002, published in the National Post author Stewart Bell
Ottawa to ban Palestinian group
Follows Jewish lobbying: Cabinet to
double number of entities covered by terror law
The federal Cabinet is expected to outlaw a Palestinian militant group
and up to a half-dozen other terrorist organizations under its new
anti-terrorism law this fall, the National Post has learned. The names
of as many as seven terrorist groups slated for legal sanctions were
expected to be approved by ministers in Ottawa over the next few weeks,
making it illegal for them to operate in Canada. It is not known which
Palestinian group is to be added to the list but the most likely
candidates are Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Al Aqsa Martyrs
Brigade and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP).
All are hardline Islamic terrorist organizations that have dispatched
suicide bombers and gunmen into Israel to kill civilians. Their aim is
to destroy Israel through a relentless campaign of random violence.
The decision will likely anger Muslim extremists but will be welcomed
by Canadian Jewish organizations, which have appealed to Ottawa in
recent weeks to put the main instigators of Palestinian terrorism on
the list. The Canadian government passed an anti-terrorism law last
December that allows it to produce a list of what it calls "entities
knowingly engaged in terrorist activity" whose operations are banned
under the Criminal Code. But so far only al-Qaeda and six affiliated
Islamic terrorist groups have been put on the list: Egyptian Al Jihad,
Algerian Armed Islamic Group, Vanguards of Conquest, Al-Gama'a
al-Islamiyya, Salifist Group for Call and Combat and al-Ittihad
al-Islam.
Canada's most prominent Jewish organizations want the list expanded to
include Palestinian groups that target Israel and Jews around the
world. "There is certainly as much proof of terrorist activity attached
to groups such as Hamas, Islamic Jihad, Hezbollah, PFLP and the Al Aqsa
Martyrs Brigade as there is for al-Qaeda," said David Matas, senior
legal counsel for B'nai Brith Canada.
"In fact, these groups boast openly about their atrocities."
Lawrence MacAulay, the Solicitor-General, announced the first round of
designations on July 23, saying he wanted Canadians to be fully aware
that the organizations were engaged in terrorism. "People might
happen to be dealing with these entities and not be aware that they are
terrorist groups. What we're saying today is these are terrorist
groups. They're listed under the Criminal Code. If you deal with them,
assist them in any way, you're breaking the law and we're going to come
after you." Officials say the process of placing terrorist
organizations on the list is time-consuming; a stack of documentation
several feet high is required to justify each of the designations.
Federal agencies involved in national security compile reports on
terrorist groups and forward them to the Solicitor-General, who then
brings them to Cabinet for approval. Each report forwarded to Cabinet
is said to be as long as 70 pages, with thousands of pages of
appendices. The Post has requested copies of the reports under the
Access to Information Act but the government has said they cannot be
released because they are Cabinet confidences. Those named on the list
face criminal sanctions. Anyone who knowingly participates in activity
that enhances the group's ability to conduct terrorism could be
arrested and prosecuted. Those named on the list could also have their
property and assets seized.
While a Palestinian group is among the next batch going forwarded, it
is possible delays could hold up the process. The government wants each
of the designations to be carefully backed up by detailed documentation
in case the Cabinet decisions are challenged in court. The designation
of al-Qaeda has not been challenged but those sympathetic to
Palestinian militant groups might try to stop Canada from outlawing
such groups as Hamas.
Although Canada has not yet outlawed any Palestinian groups, it has
ordered banks to freeze the assets of several anti-Israeli groups,
including Hamas, Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade, PFLP and Palestinian Islamic
Jihad. But Ottawa has frozen the accounts of only the military wing of
the terrorist group Hezbollah, drawing complaints from Jewish groups
who argue there is no distinction between the armed and political wings
of the organization. Hamas and other Palestinian groups have some
support among militant Muslims in Canada, including on university
campuses. The Post reported last month that the Web site of a Concordia
University Muslim student group was providing a platform for the
justification of Palestinian suicide terrorism. The material was
removed after a complaint from B'nai Brith.
The Post also reported that intelligence information collected by the
FBI indicated that Hamas had been collecting money in Canada since the
early 1990s. Several prominent Muslim organizations with offices in
Canada have solicited donations to the Holy Land Foundation, a Texas
charity shut down by U.S. authorities last year for allegedly financing
Hamas.
© Copyright 2002 National Post
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
December 12, 2002, published in the Globe and Mail. author Jeff
Sallot
Hezbollah ban attacked as biased
Canadian Arabs say Israeli settlements should also be seen as type
of terrorism
Angrily reacting to a ban on the Lebanese group Hezbollah, Canadian
Arabs say the government should also outlaw fundraising for Israeli
settlements in occupied Palestinian territory. "Illegal Israeli
settlements and destruction of Palestinian villages are terrorism
against the Palestinian people," Mazen Chouaib, the executive director
of the National Council on Canada-Arab Relations, said yesterday.
The Jewish National Fund, B'nai Brith Canada and other groups that
support the Israeli settlements should be subject to the same kind of
restrictions on activities now faced by Hezbollah, he said. Mr. Chouaib
said the ban on Hezbollah will stigmatize Canadians of Arab and Muslim
background and make them feel like "criminals or second-class citizens.
" Facing intense pressure from the Canadian Alliance in Parliament and
national Jewish lobby groups, the government reversed course and
outlawed fundraising and all other material support for Hezbollah under
antiterrorism laws. Until yesterday, the government restricted
activities in support of only the military wing of the group. Ottawa
allowed Hezbollah's political wing to raise money in Canada for
schools, clinics and other social services in war-ravaged southern
Lebanon. Solicitor-General Wayne Easter said yesterday that Hezbollah
has been raising large sums in Canada that have not all gone to
charitable work. Mr. Easter also announced a ban on Aum Shinrikyo, the
Japanese doomsday cult responsible for a 1995 poison-gas attack on the
Tokyo subway, and the Kurdistan Workers Party, which attacked
Turkish and Greek government offices in Canada in 1999. Mr. Easter was
unable to cite examples of any activities in Canada by supporters of
Aum Shinrikyo, the first group banned by Ottawa that is not based in
the Middle East. The federal law is intended to combat terrorism
globally, not just in Canada, Mr. Easter noted.
Yesterday's announcement brings to 16 the total number of groups banned
under the government's new antiterrorism law since July. Conviction for
assisting a banned group can bring a prison term of up to 10 years. Mr.
Chouaib said it has always been a myth that Hezbollah raised large sums
in Canada. The reality is that many Canadians of Lebanese descent send
small sums directly to family members back home and donations to
schools and orphanages in their old villages, he said. "Hezbollah has
no branches, representatives or fundraising activity in Canada," Mr.
Chouaib said. By contrast, Mr. Chouaib said, Jewish groups openly
support Israeli settlers who have been responsible for destroying
Palestinian villages. There is no valid comparison, B'nai Brith lawyer
David Matas said. People can debate whether or not building Israeli
settlements in Gaza and the West Bank is a good policy, but these are
not the acts of terrorism contemplated in the new federal law, Mr.
Matas said.
B'nai Brith's lawsuit against the federal government may have forced
Ottawa's hand, Mr. Matas said. B'nai Brith sought a Federal Court order
to require Ottawa to disclose its files on Hezbollah.
Foreign Affairs Minister Bill Graham said Canada is reversing its
policy on Hezbollah because of recent calls by the group's leader for
suicide bombings. He previously said Canada would deal with the
Hezbollah political wing as part of the elected Lebanese parliament.
Ori Tannenbaum, an Israeli whose father was reportedly kidnapped by
Hezbollah more than two years ago, appealed to the federal government
to apply pressure to the Lebanese government to locate and free his
father.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________
This is how the Canada government changed its policy into classifying
the Hezbollah as a terrorist group. Not only was Canada pressured by a
lawsuit from the B'nai Brith of Canada, it was also deceived by media
reports. A journalist named Sayed Anwar, reporting from Jerusalem for
the Washington Times wrote that the Hezbollah sheik Nasrallah said some
nasty things like: "Suicide bombings should be exported outside
Palestine", and "I encourage Palestinians to take suicide bombings
worldwide, don't be shy about it." The ominous quotes were picked up
and reported widely in the Canadian media.
The Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister, Bill Graham, quoted them often
as the reason for the government making a policy shift in declaring the
Hezbollah as a terrorist group. But the problem is that sheik Nasrallah
never made those comments and the reporter "Sayed Anwar" simply does
not exist. In fact, "Sayed Anwar" is really the zionist Paul Martin,
who writes from London, England, not Jerusalem. He has written many
anti-Palestine propaganda pieces under the fraudulent name of "Sayed
Anwar", never revealing that it was a pseudonym.
Sometimes, the Washington Times would carry stories by both Anwar and
Martin in the same issue. Paul Martin was exposed several months ago
and one can check the exposure on the internet in politically incorrect
websites. A pity the Canadian mainstream media and the government
bureaucrats never found out in time.
After the announcement on the policy shift was made, Neil Macdonald
reported the "Sayed Anwar" fraud on the CBC's The National. Transcripts
are shown below, for the video clip, click here
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________
transcript host Peter Mansbridge, December 11,
2002, CBC TV, The National
Ottawa put Hezbollah on list of banned
organizations
What was said by Hezbollah's Sheikh
Hassan Nasrallah
PETER MANSBRIDGE: Tonight. Banned.
BILL GRAHAM (Minister of Foreign Affairs): We will be sending a signal
to Hezbollah.
MANSBRIDGE: After months of pressure, Ottawa has put Hezbollah on its
list of banned organizations. Why now? Eric Sorensen reports from
Ottawa. Neil MacDonald is in Beirut. Intercepted and released. A ship
carrying North Korean missiles is straining relations between the US
and a Mideast ally. One hundred million dollar scam. Did Enron trick
Revenue Canada and walk away with the cash? And order of battle.
UNIDENTIFIED MAN: What you're seeing is a classic military build-up.
MANSBRIDGE: Twelve years after taking on Iraq, the United States looks
poised to strike again. How will it wage war this time?
UNIDENTIFIED MAN: In a way, we're trying to use huge military invasion
forces to produce a coup d'etat.
MANSBRIDGE: A feature report.
ANNOUNCER: "The National." From the Canadian Broadcasting Centre, here
is Peter Mansbridge. Ottawa put Hezbollah on list of banned
organizations
PETER MANSBRIDGE: Good evening. It is a controversial policy decision.
Slap a complete ban on the Lebanese group Hezbollah. Today the federal
government made the move, outlawing the group in Canada. Ottawa has
been under pressure to act for months, so why the change now? What was
the catalyst? In essence, the decision was driven by an incendiary
quote attributed to the leader of Hezbollah. That quote, however, is
questionable, the source suspect. That investigative story from Neil
MacDonald in a moment. First, though, here is Eric Sorensen with the
ban and the battle to get it imposed.
ERIC SORENSEN (Reporter): The latest in a series of pressure tactics
turned out to be overkill. Ori Tannenbaum, his father reportedly held
captive by Hezbollah, arrived from Israel to press Ottawa to ban the
pro-Palestinian group. The government had already done so two hours
earlier.
WAYNE EASTER (Solicitor General): This decision is made on the basis of
sound criminal and security intelligence information and in no way is
due to political pressure from anywhere.
SORENSEN: But there had been pressure from the Canadian Alliance in the
House of Commons to B'nai Brith in the courts. Today the Jewish lobby
group dropped its lawsuit to have Hezbollah outlawed.
FRANK DIMANT (B'nai Brith Canada): Canadians as a whole do not want
terrorists operating in this country. It was the voice of Canadians
that made the difference in this case.
SORENSEN: Three groups - Hezbollah, Aum Shinri Kyo which carried out
the serin gas attack in Tokyo, and the Kurdistan Workers Party which
launched attacks mainly in Turkey - have been added to a list that now
total sixteen organizations. It is illegal to belong to or to aid the
groups banned under Canada's new anti-terror law. Until today, Ottawa
had only banned Hezbollah's military wing, which had been linked to
such acts as the US marine barracks bombing in Lebanon. Hezbollah's
social political wing was allowed to operate and raise money in Canada
for education and charities. Ottawa re-assessed after Hezbollah leader
Sheikh Nasrallah was recently quoted calling on Palestinians to take a
terror campaign worldwide.
BILL GRAHAM (Minister of Foreign Affairs): It was clear from the
leaders comments the other day that, in fact, it was not distinguishing
itself from terrorist activities.
SORENSEN: The Minister of Foreign Affairs says Ottawa's decision sends
a message about terrorism and inciting terrorism.
GRAHAM: I think it will be sending a signal to Hezbollah that its
affirmation of the use of terrorism as an international instrument is
not acceptable.
SORENSEN: But others say Nasrallah's rhetoric is nothing new and
accused Ottawa of looking for an excuse to take action. This Arab
community spokesperson says Ottawa simply caved in to political
pressure.
RAJA KHOURI (Canadian Arab Federation): It's unfortunate to see a major
policy such as this one shift based on political considerations as
opposed to real security concerns.
SORENSEN: As for the impact of the ban, one Arab group says it will
block the charitable work done by Hezbollah, but the Canadian Jewish
Congress says what will be blocked is fundraising for military
activities. They may both be right. Eric Sorensen, CBC News, Ottawa.
What was said by Hezbollah's Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah
PETER MANSBRIDGE: Well now to that crucial quote, the one that helped
kickstart the change in Canadian policy and attributed to Hezbollah's
Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah. The CBC's Middle East correspondent Neil
MacDonald went to Beirut to investigate what was said and what was not.
Here's his revealing report.
NEIL MACDONALD (Reporter): This unremarkable cleric enjoys legendary
status in the Arab world. The man whose fighters drove Israel out of
Lebanon. Israel and its supporters, though, regard Sheikh Hassan
Nasrallah of Hezbollah as a cold-blooded terrorist and say his own
words have now provided the proof. Certainly the quotes attributed to
him last week and reported widely in most Canadian media were ominous.
"Suicide bombings should be exported outside Palestine", he was
reported to have said. "I encourage Palestinians to take suicide
bombings worldwide, don't be shy about it." Canadian Jewish groups and
their allies immediately pressed their demand that Canada classify
Hezbollah as a terrorist group. Ottawa resisted doing that, given that
Hezbollah also runs a social network with projects like this one which
retrains and offers work to disabled Lebanese. Hassan Nasrallah's
heavily reported new quotes merely had an impact. The only problem is
there is simply no evidence Hassan Nasrallah ever made a speech
promoting global suicide attacks. There is no record of such a speech
here, and there would be. It was not broadcast on Hezbollah's
television station, as was reported. Hezbollah, which vigorously
publicizes Nasrallah's every word, says the remarks were never uttered
and the Canadian embassy in Beirut has tried and failed to document the
quotes. The story originated not in the Middle East but in London, with
this man. Paul Martin freelances for "The Washington Times," a right
wing newspaper owned by the Unification Church. He cannot back up the
quotes his story attributes to Nasrallah. Nevertheless, he believes he
understands Nasrallah's true agenda.
PAUL MARTIN (The Washington Times): Nasrallah said we look at America
as the enemy of this nation. He then adds, we will fight the enemy or
them anywhere and everywhere and says that we need to work on the
culture of suicide missions.
MACDONALD: There is nothing new in Nasrallah's support for Palestinian
tactics in the occupied territories and in Israel. Just recently,
Nasrallah praised Palestinians he says are, quote, "willing to
sacrifice themselves fighting Israel with whatever weapon", suicide
bombs included. But, says Hezbollah legislator Mohammed Raad, Nasrallah
has specifically instructed that Hezbollah's fight with Israel is
military in nature and not to be taken outside the region. Raad says
"The Washington Times" story about exporting attacks as part of a
propaganda orchestrated by America's pro-Israel right wing. Indeed,
there does seem to be a theme to "Washington Times" stories. Earlier
this year, the paper ran a report by a reporter named Sayed Anwar
accusing Palestinian Muslims of raping, executing and extorting
Christians in Bethlehem. When the story was questioned, Sayed Anwar
turned out to be a fictitious name. A composite for Paul Martin and two
of his researchers. Martin refused to discuss that incident on camera.
Ottawa now knows that the Nasrallah quotes in the "Washington Times"
about exporting suicide attacks were almost certainly never uttered. Of
course what this all really boils down to is the old question of what
constitutes terrorism. Is Hezbollah a national liberation movement or,
as Israel and its supporters maintain, a murderous global menace? To a
great many people in this part of the world, to label Hezbollah a
terrorist organization is to choose sides in the defining conflict of
the Middle East, an intensely political decision for any government.
Neil MacDonald, CBC News, Beirut.
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
December 13, 2002 The Electronic Intifada by Nigel Parry
False Washington Times report convinces
Canada to ban Hezbollah
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
November 14, 2003, The Ottawa Citizen, by Janice Tibbetts
story
Three Palestinian groups added to
blacklist
Organizations blamed for hijackings of
cruise ship, airliners
Three Palestinian groups were blacklisted yesterday as terrorist
organizations, bringing to 34 the number of groups banned by the
Canadian government. The three groups are the Palestine Liberation
Front, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, and the
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, General Command. All
seek to destroy Israel and form an independent Palestinian state.
"The government of Canada has determined that these entities knowingly
engaged in terrorist activity," Solicitor General Wayne Easter said in
a statement. "Any person or group that is listed may have its assets
seized or forfeited."
Under the 2001 Anti-Terrorism Act, the federal cabinet is allowed to
keep a list of terror groups whose activities are deemed criminal.
Being listed makes it a crime to participate in these groups,
contribute to them or assist in their activities. The federal
government describes the 42-year-old Palestine Liberation Front as "a
small, armed splinter group" linked to the Palestinian Liberation
Organization.
"During its most active period, it is known to have conducted several
high-profile attacks, including the operation for which it is best
known, the October 1985 hijacking of the Achille Lauro," says the
solicitor general's website. The Italian cruise ship was hijacked in
the Mediterranean Sea by four hijackers, armed with guns and
explosives. They killed one passenger, disabled American Jew Leon
Klinghoffer, and demanded the release of 50 Palestinians held in
Israeli prisons.
The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) is blamed for
hijacking an El Al flight en route from Rome to Tel Aviv in 1968, and
more recently, car bombings and suicide bombings in Israel, and the
assassination of Israeli tourism minister Rehavam Ze'evi. The Popular
Front for the Liberation of Palestine, General Command's activities
also include an airline hijacking in the 1970s.
© Copyright 2003 The Ottawa Citizen
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
November 13, 2003, Canadian Press
Canada adds three Palestinian groups to
list of outlawed terror organizations
The federal government has added three Palestinian groups to its list
of terrorist organizations banned from operating in Canada. The
Palestine Liberation Front, the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine, and the PFLP-General Command all "knowingly engaged in
terrorist activity," Solicitor General Wayne Easter said in a news
release Thursday. There are now 34 groups listed under Canada's
Anti-Terrorism Act, meaning they are banned from activities in Canada.
"The assessment process for more listing continues," Easter added.
Listed organizations may have their assets seized, and anyone belonging
to or having dealings with them faces penalties ranging up to 10 years
in jail.
The controversial Anti-terrorism Act was born out of the September 11,
2001 terrorist attacks on the United States. Groups can appeal for
removal from the list by applying to the Solicitor General's
office.
© Copyright 2003 The Canadian Press