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The
pre-dawn darkness was pierced by light beams coming from long columns
of police vehicles on the deserted streets of Toronto, Canada. In
the cars, men on a mission: to swoop upon homes in different parts
of the city to arrest 19 young men whom they had identified as "Islamic
international terrorists."
The
targets had some things in common: all bore the name 'Mohammed'
in one form or another, were under 30, and had previously been,
or were still studying in the Ottawa School of Business, Toronto.
Additionally, all the men belonged to the Sunni sect and ostensibly,
all hailed from the Punjab in Pakistan.
It was an extraordinarily high-security operation, unprecedented
in scope. All highways, airports and train stations were closed
down before action began. Police stood guard at all entry points
to the city, and helicopters were seen hovering in the air.
'Project
Thread' - the operation's official name - was jointly conducted
by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) and the newly established
anti-terrorism police unit named Public Security and Anti-Terrorists
(PAST) commissioned in 2002 following 9-11. The two agencies had
been working on different leads for six months prior to taking action.
For PAST personnel involved in the operation, the tension and excitement
was overwhelming, since for most it was their first major assignment.
Once the targets were apprehended, they were handcuffed,
blindfolded, put into wagons and transported to an interrogation
centre at Maplehurst, the largest maximum security prison in Canada
where hardened criminals, murderers and rapists are usually confined.
The raiding party also seized as "evidence" against the
men at the time of the arrests their personal computers, magazines
and newspapers in their native language, Urdu, and Asian spices
and other traditional food items from their kitchens, which were
declared "raw materials for making explosives." PAST personnel
claimed to have seized three wagon-loads of such "damning"
evidence.
At Maplehurst the prisoners had heavy chains placed around
their necks and feet and they were made to don orange uniforms like
those worn by the detenues at Guantanamo Bay prison. Neither were
the men informed why they had been arrested, nor were they allowed
to call their lawyers or relatives - in blatant violation of the
law. Interestingly, only after their arrest was it discovered that
while 18 of the prisoners were Pakistanis, Anwar Mohammad, a computer
engineer and commercial pilot, though Punjabi was Indian.
The
morning following the arrests, TV channels and publications across
the world flashed the news that Canada had busted 21 members of
an Al-Qaeda sleeper cell just before the second anniversary of 9-11.
It was reported that the men had planned to blow up the Canadian
National Tower (CNT) and other important installations, including
nuclear power plants and government office buildings, but the agencies
had thwarted their plans.
The Ontario Tories celebrated the arrests and used them as
part of their election campaign, shrugging off queries about the
validity of evidence against the accused with the argument "better
safe than sorry." The media, meanwhile, dubbed the arrested
19 as the "image group" of the 19 terrorists accused of
the 9-11 bombing of the WTC, and played up the arrests as the biggest
ever success against Muslim international terrorists in the past
two years.
For the accused meanwhile, it was a descent to hell. The
first five days the detenues were kept in total isolation, in dark
cells without lights. During this period they were relentlessly
interrogated. The questions asked included queries such as how many
times a day the men offered prayers, whether they went to mosques
for the purpose, had they visited Afghanistan and met Osama bin
Laden, had they been to any training camps, had they performed Haj
or visited Saudi Arabia, and how much did they believe in the Quran
which the interrogators frequently referred to as the "War
Book," etc.
The
men's entreaties and declarations of innocence fell on deaf years.
Furthermore, throughout their confinement, they disclose, they were
constantly humiliated. "We were told [things like] 'this is
your independence day, we will tell you the real meaning of independence,"
said one of those detained, Mohammad Asif Aziz, who had moved to
Canada in 1999 to study Business Administration.
"They asked us if we celebrated the anniversary of 9-11
and told us we were going to celebrate our independence like that,"
added Mohammed Waheed, a computer programmer from a feudal family
in Gujranwala who was shortly set to graduate from the University
of Windsor. He continued, "The most heinous thing the investigators
did was threatening to make us eat pork. They maintained they would
see how we would resist eating pork which was prohibited in the
'War book,'" said Asif.
After five days of relentless interrogation, the men were
produced before the immigration courts specially set up inside the
jail, manned by members of the Immigration and Refugees Protection
Board, or briefly, Immigration Canada.
"It was very strange, we were expecting criminal court
hearings as we had been dubbed a 'threat to Canadian security.'
The prosecutors told the judge they would be presenting evidence
to support this charge. They also mentioned 'three wagon-loads of
solid evidence' against us. Strangely, 10 days later, the same prosecutors
told the judge that the charges of us being a threat to national
security were being dropped, and now we would only be charged for
immigration violations, and that too of a minor nature," said
detenue Mudassar Awan from Lahore.
The court was told that the men had obtained fake certificates
and transcripts from the Ottawa School of Business where over 400
foreigners had been issued such papers. The prosecutors disclosed
that a six-month-long inquiry which was launched into the affairs
of the institution had found that the school had issued transcripts
to students despite the expiry of its licence in June 2001. Interestingly,
the owner of the school, Samuel Luther, was not charged for any
offence. He was apparently absolved of all charges by the court
because he informed the judge about some students "behaving
in a suspicious manner."
At a seminar a week after the court hearing absolving the
19 men of security violations, the Chief Commissioner of the RCMP
announced that no evidence to support national security violations
by the detenues had been unearthed, and that they were being tried
for minor immigration violations. But their nightmare was far from
over.
After the men had been shifted to prison following five days
of solitary confinement, they were allowed to call their family
and lawyers. However, that too proved an ordeal. RCMP personnel
rang up the mens' families, friends and lawyers, warning them to
desist from helping the prisoners, and threatening to conduct large-scale
inquiries against those who did not listen and even face possible
charges of abetting terrorists themselves. "Such action detached
some of our friends and potential lawyers from us, most of whom
were also from Asia," said Waheed. Nonetheless, their kith
and kin refused to give in to the threats and managed to muster
the support of the Pakistani community and of some lawyers who began
to campaign against the discriminatory treatment meted out to the
men in violation of every law of the land and all democratic norms.
Said Waheed, "Our friends launched 'Project Threadbare' to
counter the vicious official propaganda against us and began to
seek legal remedies for us."
As
the men sat in prison waiting to discover their fate, they were
subjected to other kinds of trauma. During their days in prison
they faced dire threats to their lives from the hardened criminals
they were kept with. Seeing their images on TV with the accompanying
stories in the early days of their incarceration, many criminals
attacked them, in the process breaking the jaw of one, and fracturing
the arm of another.
As Asif Aziz narrated, "We approached the cell guard
about the threats, but he was most unconcerned. However, when some
of us were attacked he brought in his superior officers, who moved
us, presumably because our lives were important in as much as the
authorities' belief that we could lead them to Osama bin Laden."
The move did not help. The men faced similar threats in their new
cells. "Finally, after we had been shifted five times, the
authorities vacated an entire barrack for us," said Asif.
He continued, "after the authorities conceded they had
no serious case against us, they attempted to frame charges against
us for immigration violations. But none of these could be proved
either. Nevertheless, the prosecutors made us sign documents waiving
our legal rights in regard to these immigration violations, and
agreement to early deportation to Pakistan. We were so depressed
and desperate to see our ordeal end at any cost, that almost all
of us agreed to forego our rights in exchange for being sent back
to Pakistan." Asif also disclosed that a few who resisted signing
on the dotted line were finally coerced into doing so because the
authorities threatened to produce evidence against them in other
cases if they did not come around. Nonetheless, even when all the
men signed, the court issued deportation orders for only 10 of the
19 men. The cases of the others are still pending on account of
certain legal requirements, with the exception of the Indian national
against whom all charges were withdrawn.
The case opened up a Pandora's Box. The men's lawyers had argued
in court that their arrest was a classic case of racial prejudice,
and in violation of Canadian law. They had also questioned why only
19 of the 400 students in the school, who had been accused of obtaining
fake degrees had been arrested. The lawyers maintained it was because
of the men's Muslim identity and the fact that they hailed from
the Punjab in Pakistan, cited as a "hotbed of extremism and
Talibanisation" in the RCMP report. However, no remedial action
was taken by the Canadian authorities.
Furthermore, according to the men, their tribulations did not end
with their deportation. Said Asif Aziz, "The flashing of our
pictures all over the world as alleged terrorists destroyed our
careers, shattered the prospects of good jobs and further study
for us and subjected us and our families to immense mental torture
and suffering."
Then there was the ordeal they faced when they arrived in Pakistan.
The immigration authorities, FIA, and police department did a thorough
interrogation of the men at the airport, and subsequently in their
respective offices. "Instead of sympathising with us, our own
law enforcers made us feel we had committed a crime," said
Awan. This, despite the fact that the Pakistani High Commission
in Ottawa had sent them letters informing them that the Canadian
government had informed the former through a letter that we had
no charges against us in respect of national security."
An understandably bitter Asif disclosed, "Now we are seeking
a public apology from the Canadian government, the issuance of clearance
certificates of all charges against us and compensation according
to the law." He added that the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan
(HRCP) and its director Asma Jahangir had been of great help in
this regard.
"We are pursuing their case with the Canadian authorities and
plan to sue the Canadian government. We are seeking an apology and
compensation," said Jahangir, adding that she was hopeful of
achieving those objectives. She continued, "The systematic
abuse of rights and denial of due legal process will only strengthen
the hands of militant forces who preach hatred in the name of religion."
Back home the men maintain that their image of Canada being
a free and fair country had drastically changed after their horrific
ordeal. Said Asif, their defence counsel, arguing before the court,
had likened their situation to that of Japanese-Canadian nationals
during World War II who were interned in detention camps and later
deported in the name of national security, and he couldn't help
but agree with the analogy. He also said the media campaign against
them was so effective in stirring up racial hatred against the Muslims
that even their lawyer had received threats for "supporting
terrorists" by racial extremist groups in Canada. "Rocco
Galati who had announced he would sue the Canadian government, was
issued life threats by more than one group," he maintained..
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