Date: 20091214
Docket: DES-3-08
Citation: 2009 FC 1263
Ottawa, Ontario,
December 14, 2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Mosley
BETWEEN:
IN THE MATTER OF a certificate signed
pursuant
to section 77(1) of the Immigration
and Refugee
Protection Act (IRPA);
AND IN THE MATTER OF the referral of a
certificate to the Federal Court pursuant
to section
77(1) of the IRPA;
AND IN THE MATTER OF HASSAN ALMREI
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
INTRODUCTION
[1]
On February 22, 2008, the Minister of Public Safety and
Emergency Preparedness and the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration signed a
certificate in which they state that Hassan Almrei is a foreign national who is
inadmissible to Canada on security grounds. As required by
subsection 77(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, S.C.
2001, c. 27, as amended, ("IRPA"), the certificate was referred to
the Court for determination as to whether it is reasonable. These are my
reasons for determining that the certificate is not reasonable.
[2]
These reasons take into account the information and other
evidence heard in closed hearings in the absence of Mr. Almrei and his counsel
and of the public. As set out in paragraph 83(1)(c) of the IRPA, the Court may,
and shall on the request of the Minister, hear information or other evidence in
the absence of the public if, in the judge’s opinion, its disclosure could be
injurious to national security or endanger the safety of any person. A separate
private set of reasons for judgment has been filed in the Designated
Proceedings Registry of the Federal Court and will be accessible only to the
Ministers and their counsel and to the Special Advocates and to any appellate
court that may consider this matter further.
[3]
In the aftermath of the tragic events of September 11, 2001
(“9/11”), it was reasonable to believe that Hassan Almrei posed a risk to the
security of Canada. On the information then available to
officials and to the Court, the inference was compelling that he was an
extremist who supported the ideology of Osama Bin Laden and was involved in a
global false document network. In security intelligence terms, Almrei had a
“pedigree”. He came from a Syrian family linked to the Muslim Brotherhood, an
organization formerly known for terrorist acts. Raised in Saudi
Arabia, he had travelled to Pakistan and Afghanistan to
join the jihad against the communist regime in Kabul. He
was known to have associated with a leader of the Arab Afghan mujahidin, Ibn al
Khattab, and to have supported Khattab’s jihad against the Russians in Chechnya.
[4]
Following his admission to Canada in
1999, Almrei was linked to persons believed on reasonable grounds to have
extremist views. Almrei was known to have contacts in Canada and
abroad from whom he could obtain false identity and travel papers. He had
himself used a forged passport to come to Canada. He
lied to Canadian authorities about his background and concealed his travels to
Afghanistan and Tajikistan. Canada
extended its protection to Almrei by recognizing him as a Convention refugee.
He returned the favour by providing a forged Canadian passport and funds to an
Arab Afghan associate who had crossed our border illegally, arranged a marriage
of convenience for a failed refugee claimant and dealt in illicit drivers’
licenses.
[5]
In 2001, Almrei was at the very least an opportunist
willing, for a suitable fee, to violate Canada’s
laws while he took advantage of its generosity. His object was to gain Canadian
permanent residency and Citizenship so he could travel freely abroad for
business purposes. Prior to 9/11, this was known to the Canadian Security
Intelligence Service (“CSIS”) and their counterparts in the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police (“RCMP”). CSIS had been watching his movements and collecting
information about him and his associates for over two years. The RCMP was
conducting its own criminal investigation. Much of the information collected by
both agencies was provided by human sources. CSIS saw Almrei as a “sleeper” and
were content initially to keep him under surveillance and to identify his
contacts. The events of 9/11 instantly changed that dynamic. Almrei was then
viewed, on reasonable grounds, to be part of a much greater threat to North
American security as someone who had the skills and the contacts to arrange for
terrorists to cross borders on forged papers.
[6]
If these proceedings were based solely on the information
available to the Ministers and the Court in October 2001, I would have no
difficulty in concluding that Almrei’s arrest and detention on a security
certificate to contain the perceived threat was reasonable. But the Court is not
engaged in that task. Nor is it conducting a judicial review of whether the
Ministers who signed the fresh certificate in February 2008 made the correct
decision. The question for the Court to determine is whether, on all of the
information and other evidence presented in these proceedings, is the
certificate reasonable to-day. Or, in other words, is the assertion that
Almrei is presently a security risk based on objectively reasonable grounds.
[7]
In arriving at a conclusion on that question, the Court has
considered information and evidence that was not placed before the Ministers
when the decision was made to issue the 2008 certificate, and that was not
previously presented to the Court, which has cast a different light on
circumstances and events.
[8]
In these reasons, I will first set out the background to
the issuance of the certificate, the procedural history of this application and
the present legislative regime under which it was considered. Next, I will
review the evidence and the issues, both legal and factual, that were raised
during the proceedings. I will then outline the allegations concerning Mr.
Almrei. Finally I will discuss my analysis and conclusions arising from the
evidence and issues. Formal judgment will be reserved to allow the parties some
time to review these reasons and propose questions for certification. An index
is provided for convenient reference.
INDEX (by paragraph numbers):
Background 9-17
Procedural History of
this Application 18-53
Legal Framework 54-57
Inadmissibility 58-62
“Member of an
Organization” 63-69
“Terrorism” 70-74
Armed conflict
exemption 75-79
“Danger to
National Security” 80-81
Burden of Proof 82
Quality of the
Evidence 83-85
Standard of
Proof 86-105
Procedure 106-111
Role of the
Special Advocates 112-113
The Issues
114-120
The Allegations 121-122
The “Information and Other
Evidence”
Overview 123-127
The Open Source
Information 128-131
Third Party
Information 132-140
Telecommunications
Intercepts 141-145
Physical
Surveillance Reports 146-148
Information Obtained or Derived from
Torture or Cruel, Inhumane or
Degrading Treatment 149-153
The
Human Source Information 154-164
The
Service Witnesses 165-201
Hassan
Almrei 202-260
The Expert Opinion Evidence 261-262
Dr. Martin
Rudner 263-286
Mr. Thomas
Quiggin 287-322
Sheikh Ahmad
Kutty 323-335
Dr. Lisa Given 336-348
Dr. Brian Williams 349-394
Analysis
Are the factual allegations against Almrei
supported by the information and other
evidence? 395-398
Osama Bin Laden, Al Qaeda and
the “Bin Laden Network” 399-429
Almrei’s Travel and Status in Canada 430-434
Almrei’s association with Osama Bin
Laden and support for jihad 435-455
Arab
Afghan Connections 456
Ibn
Khattab 457-464
Nabil
Almarabh 465-469
Ahmed
Al Kaysee 470
Hisham
Al Taha 471
Involvement
in False Documentation 472-478
Security Consciousness and Use of
Clandestine Methodology 479
Should the Certificate be Stayed as an Abuse
of the Court’s Process? 480-483
Lack of Disclosure/Inability to
Meet the Case 484-489
Destruction of Evidence 490-492
Choice of Procedure 493-497
Breach of the Duty of Candour 498-503
Conclusion 504-509
Certified Questions 510-513
BACKGROUND
[9]
In
January 1999, Almrei arrived at Pearson Airport using a false United Arab Emirates passport bearing a
valid multiple entry visa, was admitted as a visitor, and subsequently claimed
Convention refugee protection on the ground that he feared persecution in Syria. The Immigration and
Refugee Board granted him protection in June 2000. He applied for permanent
residence in November 2000.
[10]
A
certificate naming Almrei as a security risk was signed by the Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration and the Solicitor General of Canada on October 19,
2001. Almrei was then taken into custody and detained in accordance with
subsection 40.1(1) of the Immigration Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. I-2, as
amended, (“the former Act”). The matter was then referred to the Federal Court
for a determination as to the reasonableness of the certificate. Hearings were
held in October and November 2001. Following a ruling that he could not testify
in a closed session, as he had requested, Mr. Almrei declined to provide
evidence in that proceeding.
[11]
The
Court concluded that the closed evidence, heard in the absence of Mr. Almrei
and his counsel, provided reasonable grounds to believe that Mr. Almrei was a
member of an international network of extremist individuals who supported the
Islamic extremist ideals espoused by Osama Bin Laden and that Mr. Almrei was
involved in a forgery ring with international connections: Almrei (Re),
2001 FCT 1288, [2001] F.C.J. No. 1772.
[12]
Efforts
followed to remove Almrei from Canada. Opinions were issued by delegates of the Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration that Almrei was a danger to the security of Canada
and could be removed to Syria, his country of
nationality. Mr. Almrei sought judicial review of those opinions in the Federal
Court and brought several applications for release from detention: Almrei v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FC 420, [2004]
F.C.J. No. 509 affirmed, Almrei v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2005 FCA 54, [2005] F.C.J. No. 213; Almrei v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 355, [2005]
F.C.J. No.437 Almrei v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2005 FC 1645, [2005] F.C.J. No. 1994; Almrei v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 1025, [2007] F.C.J. No.1292.
[13]
Mr.
Almrei’s appeal from the decision of the Federal Court of Appeal rejecting his
challenge to the security certificate provisions of IRPA, as infringing
sections 7 and 12 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Part I
of the Constitution Act, 1982, being Schedule B to the Canada Act
1982 (U.K.), 1982, c.11 (“the Charter”), was merged with those in
the security certificate cases involving Adil Charkaoui and Mohammed Harkat.
Reasons for judgment were issued by the Supreme Court of Canada on February 23,
2007 in Charkaoui v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2007 SCC 9, [2007] S.C.R. 350 (“Charkaoui 1”). In its decision, the
Supreme Court concluded that the IRPA regime for determining the reasonableness
of security certificates and for reviewing the detention of named persons was
inadequate to protect their interests when classified information was provided to
a designated judge of the Federal Court during the closed proceedings.
[14]
The
Supreme Court declared that the procedures under IRPA for the judicial
confirmation of certificates and for the review of the detention of the named
persons violated the fundamental justice provisions of section 7 and had not
been shown to be justified under section 1 of the Charter. Accordingly,
the procedures were of no force or effect. In order to give Parliament time to
amend the law, the Supreme Court suspended its declaration with respect to the
invalidity of the certificate procedure for one year from the date of the
judgment. After that year, the certificates concerning Mr. Almrei and any other
named person that had been declared "reasonable" would lose that status.
Should the Ministers wish to issue a certificate thereafter, a fresh
determination of reasonableness would be required under the new process to be
devised by Parliament. Similarly, any detention review occurring after the
delay would be subject to the new process: (Charkaoui 1 at para. 140).
[15]
The
legislative response to Charkaoui 1 was enacted within the one year
timeline set by the Supreme Court. An Act to amend the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act (certificate and special advocate) and to make a
consequential amendment to another Act, S. C. 2008, c. 3 ("Bill
C-3") received Royal Assent on February 14, 2008 and came into force on
February 22, 2008. The amendments to IRPA enacted through Bill C-3 provided for
the appointment of Special Advocates to represent the interests of named
persons during closed security certificate proceedings and revised the
detention review procedures set out in IRPA.
[16]
In Charkaoui
v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 SCC 38, [2008] 2 S.C.R. 326
(“Charkaoui II”) the Supreme Court of Canada considered the nature of
the duty owed by the Service to retain and disclose information in its
possession about a person named in a security certificate
issued under subsection 77(1) of the Act. Previously, it had been the policy of
the Service to destroy all operational notes after they had been transcribed
into a report. The Supreme Court found this policy to be based upon a flawed
interpretation of section 12 of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-23 (CSIS Act). The Court held that CSIS should be
required to retain all of the information in its possession and disclose it to
the Ministers and the designated judge in order to uphold the named person’s
right to procedural fairness. If such were done, the Court reasoned, Ministers
would be better positioned to make appropriate decisions on issuing a
certificate. The designated judge would also be able to consider all of the
evidence in determining what should be protected on national security grounds
and what should be disclosed to the named person.
[17]
On
February 22, 2008, the date that the amendments to IRPA came into effect, the
Ministers signed new certificates naming Mr. Almrei and four other persons as
security risks and referred the certificates to the Federal Court for review
under subsection 77(1) of IRPA. To initiate the present proceedings the
Ministers filed a Notice of Referral of Certificate together with a top-secret
Security Intelligence Report (“SIR”) with supporting reference materials. The
SIR is a narrative report prepared by CSIS setting out its grounds for
believing that a person is inadmissible to Canada. A public summary of the SIR entitled a
Statement Summarizing the Information, with the corresponding open source
reference material, was served on Mr. Almrei and filed with the Court.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY OF THIS APPLICATION
[18]
As
Mr. Almrei remained in custody on February 22, 2008, more than seven years
after his arrest on the initial certificate, a review of his detention was the
initial priority. In compliance with the Supreme Court’s decision in Charkaoui
I, the revised statute required a detention review to begin within six
months of the coming into force of the new legislation. It took time to
resolve some preliminary matters including the appointment of counsel and the
selection of Special Advocates. The detention review was begun on August 20,
2008 and continued through the fall months. Following a series of hearings, Mr.
Almrei was ordered released from detention on strict terms and conditions. The
grounds for that decision are set out in reasons for judgment issued on January
2, 2009: Re Almrei, 2009 FC 3, [2009] F.C.J. No. 1.
[19]
In
correspondence dated September 12, 2008, in the DES-4-08 certificate, counsel
for the Ministers advised the Court they had asked CSIS to examine closely the
information and other evidence in each of the five certificate cases in order
to determine whether original operational notes had been preserved in
accordance with the decision of the Supreme Court in Charkaoui II.
Further to motions filed by the respondent on September 30, 2008 (amended on
October 31, 2008), a disclosure order was issued on October 10, 2008 in which
CSIS was directed to produce all information and intelligence related to Mr.
Almrei in its possession or holdings.
[20]
CSIS
was unable to meet the time-table initially fixed by the Court due to the
quantity of records to be searched and the workload demands caused by similar
orders in each of the other four certificate cases. Extensions of time were
required to complete the work. In the interim, the proceedings continued,
hearings were conducted and information was provided to the Court and the
Special Advocates in response to undertakings made by CSIS and the Ministers'
counsel during the detention review.
[21]
On
October 31, 2008 motions and a notice of constitutional question were filed by
the respondent indicating his intention to challenge the standard of proof of
"reasonable grounds to believe" set out in section 33 of the IRPA.
Mr. Almrei sought an order that the standard of proof to be met by the evidence
in the Court's determination of a certificate’s reasonableness pursuant to
section 78 of the IRPA is to a balance of probabilities or, in the alternative,
a declaration that the standard is inconsistent with the right to a fair
hearing protected by section 7 of the Charter. In case management
conferences with Mr. Almrei and counsel, I indicated that I would defer ruling
on these matters until the completion of the evidentiary hearings.
[22]
Mr. Almrei had previously brought a motion challenging the
constitutionality of subsections 85.4(2) and 85.5(b) of IRPA which limit
communications by Special Advocates with the named persons and their counsel
after the Special Advocates have had access to the closed information in the
SIR. This was linked with similar motions brought on behalf of three of the
other named persons and which were collectively heard and adjudicated by the
Chief Justice. In written reasons and an order released on November 3, 2008 (Re Almrei, 2008 FC 1216, [2008]
F.C.J. No. 1488), the Chief Justice dismissed the constitutional motion as
premature without prejudice to any party's right to challenge the
constitutionality of the legislation with an appropriate factual matrix.
[23]
By
order dated January 2, 2009, the Chief Justice directed that my colleague
Justice Eleanor Dawson adjudicate upon two common issues of law that had arisen
in four of the certificate proceedings in relation to the Charkaoui II
production, including this matter. The two common issues were identified in the
order as follows:
a)
What is the role of the designated judge with respect to the
additional
information disclosed by the Ministers pursuant
to
the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in
Charkaoui
v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2008
SCC
38? More specifically, does paragraph 62 of that
decision
require the judge to "verify" all information
disclosed
by the Ministers if the Special Advocates and
counsel
for the Ministers all agree that a portion of that
information
is irrelevant to the issues before the Court?
b)
Should the information disclosed to the named persons and
their
counsel be placed on the Court's public files in these
proceedings?
If so, when?
[24]
At paragraph 62 of its decision in Charkaoui II, the
Supreme Court had made the following comments:
As
things stand, the destruction by CSIS officers of their operational notes
compromises the very function of judicial review. To uphold the right to
procedural fairness of people in Mr. Charkaoui's position, CSIS should be
required to retain all the information in its possession and to disclose it to
the ministers and the designated judge. The ministers and the designated judge
will in turn be responsible for verifying the information they are given.
If, as we suggest, the ministers have access to all the undestroyed
"original" evidence, they will be better positioned to make
appropriate decisions on issuing a certificate. The designated judge, who will
have access to all the evidence, will then exclude any evidence that might pose
a threat to national security and summarize the remaining evidence -- which he
or she will have been able to check for accuracy and reliability -- for the
named person. [Emphasis added]
[25]
As a
result of the highlighted phrases, a question arose as to whether the
designated judge in a certificate case must personally verify all of the
information provided to the Court in conformity with the disclosure obligation
imposed on CSIS.
[26]
In
reasons for judgment released on March 5, 2009 (Re Almrei, 2009 FC 240,
[2009] F.C.J. No. 346), Justice Dawson considered that the reference to
verification in the Charkaoui II judgment stemmed from the context of
the former legislative scheme, not that enacted by Bill C-3. The Supreme Court
could not have intended that the Court consider information which the
Ministers and the Special Advocates had agreed was irrelevant. Where the
information was relevant, the Court was required under the amended statute to
determine whether disclosure would be injurious to national security. That
responsibility could not be delegated to counsel.
[27]
At
paragraph 62 of her reasons, Justice Dawson concluded as follows,:
(a)
Where the Ministers and the special advocate agree that material disclosed by
the Ministers pursuant to Charkaoui 2 is irrelevant to the issues before the
Court, the Court may rely upon that agreement. In such a case, the Court need
not verify information that the Ministers and the Special Advocates agree to be
irrelevant.
(b)
No information filed with the Court in confidence pursuant to Charkaoui 2 can
be disclosed to the person named in a security certificate without the prior
approval of the Court.
(c)
Information or evidence disclosed to the named persons pursuant to Charkaoui 2
should be disclosed directly to counsel for each person named in a security
certificate. The Charkaoui 2 disclosure should not be placed on the Court’s
public file. Such information or evidence would only become public if it is
relied upon by a party and placed into evidence.
(d)
Summaries of evidence or information made pursuant to paragraph 83(1)(e) of the
Act must be placed on the Court’s public file because they relate to
information relied upon by the Ministers and to what transpired in the in
camera proceedings.
[28]
Additional
issues outside the scope of the Chief Justice’s Order were raised at the
hearing before Justice Dawson. It was argued that the designate judge should
not have regard to any portion of the Charkaoui II disclosure unless it
was necessary to adjudicate a disagreement or it was relied upon by one of the
parties. Justice Dawson noted, at paragraphs 34-36 of her reasons, that it was
premature to make any pronouncements circumscribing the role of the designated
judge in reviewing the material absent an understanding of the content and
submissions on a proper evidentiary basis. Each case would depend on its own
circumstances and there could be many reasons for the Court to review the
information.
[29]
Justice Dawson expressly made no determination about the
permissibility of the Ministers later seeking to augment the information upon
which the security certificate is based, or to amend the report filed in
support of the certificate, by relying upon a portion of the Charkaoui II
disclosure (endnote 1 to the Reasons for Order). The question of whether the
Ministers could augment the information in the SIR became an issue in this case
but the additional information was from sources other than the Charkaoui II
disclosure.
[30]
On
February 9, 2009, CSIS having completed their file search, the Ministers filed
bound volumes entitled “Charkaoui II Production” including DVDs
containing approximately 1276 records of varying size retrieved from the CSIS
operational databank in an electronic format.
[31]
Some
of the information in the produced records was redacted or blacked out by CSIS
as it concerned the investigation of other persons and was, in their view,
irrelevant as outside the scope of the October 10, 2008 Order. Internal
administrative information such as the names of CSIS employees, file and phone
numbers and information which would disclose operational methods or identify
human sources was also redacted. I considered it necessary to review unredacted
or clear versions of these records to ensure that the redactions were valid and
did not exclude information material to the proceedings. Based on that review,
I was satisfied that for the most part, the redactions had been appropriate in
that they did not obscure information that was material to this case and
necessary for the Court and the Special Advocates to perform their functions in
the closed proceedings.
[32]
To
illustrate, included in the records were documents such as periodic situation
or overview reports concerning all of the CSIS investigative targets during the
relevant time-frame. These records were produced because they incidentally
contained Mr. Almrei’s name and information concerning him. The remainder of
the information in these documents was irrelevant to these proceedings and was
properly redacted in the disclosed records. In this respect, I would note that
paragraph 83(1)(j) of the IRPA provides that the Court shall not base a
decision on information or other evidence provided by the Minister if the judge
determines that it is not relevant or if the Minister withdraws it.
[33]
In
some instances, while the redacted information was not on its face material to
these proceedings, I considered that the redactions had been excessive and
tended to unnecessarily obscure portions of the records. For example, the names
and other identifying particulars of casual contacts and sources of
information, including police officers, was routinely redacted in these
documents in keeping with the Service’s policy of protecting human sources.
This information was not sensitive and would not have put individuals at risk
if inadvertently released. On March 20, 2008 I ordered reconsideration of the
redactions in the documents filed on February 9, 2009. Ministers were also
directed to conduct a further search for additional documents relating to
certain named individuals with a connection to this case. On March 27, 2009 the
Ministers filed revised copies of the February 9, 2009 document production with
a number of redactions removed.
[34]
It
became apparent during the review of the February 9th documents that
CSIS had conducted a thorough search of their operational databank for any
records that contained Mr. Almrei’s name (and his “kunya” or respect name), and
variants thereof. A great deal of this material was repetitive and of no
evidentiary value, as it merely reiterated previously collected information in
the periodic reports required by the administrative procedures of the Service.
[35]
It
is doubtful that the Supreme Court had this type of disclosure in mind when
they stated that “…CSIS should be required to retain all the information in its
possession and to disclose it to the Ministers and the designated judge” at
paragraph 62 of Charkaoui II. In hindsight, a more focused search would
have saved considerable time. Produced records that were of value included
electronic intercept and physical surveillance reports and reports of requests
for information addressed to foreign agencies and their responses, the
implications of which will be discussed below.
[36]
On
March 24-25, 2009 the Ministers filed an Amended Security Intelligence
Report (“A/SIR”) and an additional reference volume, and an Amended
Summary of the Security Intelligence Report together with corrections to the
reference index of February 22, 2008 and additional public and private
reference material. The respondent and the Special Advocates objected to the
filing of this new material more than a year after the issuance of the
certificate.
[37]
In Charkaoui
II, the Supreme Court commented on the practice of submitting evidence to
the designated judge considering the reasonableness of the certificate which
was not before the Ministers when they signed it. The Court concluded that any
new evidence should be admitted, regardless of whether it is submitted to the
designated judge by the Ministers or by the named person. The judicial review
process is not limited to a consideration of the material before the Ministers
or to the bases of their initial decision and new evidence can be as beneficial
to the named person as to the Ministers: Charkaoui II at paragraphs
70-73.
[38]
In
my view, such a practice may in some circumstances constitute an abuse of the
Court’s process where, for example, information is unfairly withheld for
tactical reasons and provided too late in the proceedings for the named person
to respond, as was alleged here. In this instance, there was no evidence before
me to substantiate such a finding. The material was accepted subject to further
consideration following closing arguments. I recognize, however, that the
practical effect of this decision was to allow the Ministers to bolster their
case following the strong challenge presented by the respondent during the
detention review hearings. The Ministers filed a sizable body of material that
had not been referenced or considered in the decision to issue the certificate.
[39]
On
March 27, 2009 I dismissed motions brought by the respondent in anticipation of
the reasonableness hearings: Re Almrei, 2009 FC 322, [2009] F.C.J. No.
681. The first motion, regarding the constitutionality of subsections 85.4(2)
and 85.5(b) of the IRPA, in relation to communications between the respondent
and the Special Advocates, was largely based on the arguments previously heard
and determined by Chief Justice Allan Lutfy in November.
[40]
I
concluded that the issue of the constitutionality of the restrictions on
communication by the Special Advocates continued to be premature in the absence
of a factual basis. The alternate remedy sought, to authorize the respondent to
submit questions to the Special Advocates in a sealed envelope and to receive
their replies without disclosure to the Court or to the Ministers, was also
denied. I ruled that while there was no obstacle to the respondent asking
questions of the Special Advocates without informing the Court or the
Ministers, the Special Advocates would have to obtain judicial authorization
prior to communicating their answers to the respondent so as to respect the
Court’s obligation to protect information that would injure Canada’s national
security.
[41]
The
Special Advocates were authorized throughout the proceedings to communicate
with the respondent and his counsel regarding scheduling matters and, from time
to time, to discuss certain legal issues so long as this did not involve
disclosure of top secret information they had access to in the closed
materials. They were also authorized to communicate with the Special Advocates
appointed in the other security certificate cases regarding common disclosure
issues stemming from the closed hearings. On May 14, 2009, for example, Mr. Copeland
was authorized to communicate to Mr. Almrei and his counsel that the top secret
material filed by the Ministers did not rely upon information that was obtained
by or derived from the interrogation of detainees by the US authorities at
Guantánamo Bay, Cuba or at any of the so-called "black sites" said to
be operated by US intelligence services. On May 20, 2009, Mr. Cameron was
authorized to communicate with counsel for Mr. Almrei about the redacted
contents of a RCMP report.
[42]
In
his motions, the respondent also sought a declaration that the Charter
required the importing of the balancing test in section 38.06 of the Canada
Evidence Act into paragraph 83(1)(e) of IRPA so as to allow for the
disclosure of information where the interests of justice outweighed the injury
to national security. I concluded that this motion was also premature as the
situation anticipated by the respondent had, as yet, not occurred. I also
declined to issue a declaration of principles with respect to disclosure at
that time, as requested, for similar reasons.
[43]
As
matters progressed in the case, it did not prove necessary to decide the
balancing issue as the conflict between the competing security and liberty
interests did not arise on a disclosure motion. The Ministers objected to the
disclosure of certain telecommunications and physical surveillance reports as
they were not relied upon in support of the SIR and did not, on their face,
provide material evidence of an exculpatory nature. But they resisted this
disclosure on the grounds of a lack of relevancy and not because their release
would injure national security. Upon considering the matter and concluding that
they could be relevant and were non-injurious, summaries of the reports were
ordered disclosed to the respondent.
[44]
The
closed evidentiary hearings in the fall of 2008 had proceeded on the
understanding that the Ministers would present testimony from Service witnesses
relating to both Mr. Almrei's alleged dangerousness and flight risk, for the
purposes of the detention review, and to the reasonableness of the certificate.
The respondent elected not to cross examine the Service witness who testified
in the public hearing on matters going only to reasonableness on the
understanding that he would be recalled for that purpose. For operational
reasons, the Service witness was no longer available for the new dates
scheduled when the reasonableness hearing was postponed. In the circumstances,
the evidence of the witness relating to reasonableness was struck out and
Ministers were granted leave to call a new Service witness to give evidence
relating to the allegations at the public hearing. The same Service witness who
testified in the closed hearings on detention gave evidence in the closed
hearings on reasonableness.
[45]
On
April 17, 2009 following a series of closed hearings respecting disclosure to
the respondent, the Ministers filed a document entitled Public Disclosure of
Information used in the Amended Security Intelligence Report (SIR). This
included summaries of intercepted conversations and physical surveillance
reports that were relied upon in the A/SIR, and information provided to CSIS by
CIC and the CBSA that was used in the A/SIR.
[46]
On
April 24, 2009 the Ministers filed documents entitled Disclosure of
Information in the Charkaoui II Production. This consisted of summaries of
intercepted communications involving Mr. Almrei between September 12, 2001 and
October 18, 2001 together with an overview summary of physical surveillance
reports concerning Mr. Almrei between August 1999 and October 2001.
[47]
Public evidence hearings were conducted over the course of
18 days in Toronto between April 27, 2009 and May 27, 2009.
The testimony will be described below. On six occasions during those hearings,
the court held in camera and ex parte conferences in chambers
with CSIS counsel and the Special Advocates to discuss disclosure and other
issues relating to the closed information. A security cleared court reporter
and registry officer were present to ensure the maintenance of a record.
[48]
The parties filed extensive written submissions on the
factual and legal issues in these proceedings and public oral argument was
heard in Toronto on July 2, 3, 6, 2009.
[49]
Closed hearings were held in Ottawa to
address questions which had arisen with respect to the reliability of
classified information provided to the Court and to the Special Advocates. On
April 3, 2009 I ordered CSIS to conduct a search for any documents or other
records in the possession of the Service not included in the February 9, 2009
documents which contained an assessment of the credibility and reliability of
the information provided by specified human sources. The Ministers filed
additional information respecting the human sources on May 1, 2009 and, on May
15, 2009, a Supplementary Response to the April 3, 2009 Order. On May 25, 2009
the Ministers fled a Revised and Amended Source Exhibit.
[50]
On June 3, 2009, I issued a confidential direction to the
Ministers and CSIS for production to the Court and the Special Advocates of
copies of documents and other records from the CSIS human source files and
instructions concerning a review of the files. On June 9, 2009 I ordered
production of the original source exhibits filed with the Court in the prior
certificate proceedings. On June 17, 2009, an Order was issued for production
of the source exhibits sworn in support of warrants issued in 2000 and 2001
relating to the respondent. That material was delivered and the Ministers filed
a document entitled a “Source Précis” on June 22, 2009 containing additional
and revised information.
[51]
Examination and cross-examination of service witnesses with
respect to issues arising from these documents and, more generally, with
respect to the closed information relied upon by the Ministers in the A/SIR,
took place in Ottawa between June 22 and 26, 2009. Closed oral submissions were
heard in Ottawa on July 27-28, 2009.
[52]
On July 24, 2009 the Special Advocates brought a motion in
the closed proceedings to have the security certificate quashed on the grounds
that it was an abuse of the Court’s process. The Ministers filed their written
response on August 21, 2009. The respondent was informed of this on August 26,
2009. Reply submissions were received from the Special Advocates on September
4, 2009. While I deal with that motion in greater detail in my closed reasons
due to the sensitive nature of the information referenced, I will also touch on
it in these reasons.
[53]
A review of the release conditions was begun on July 28,
2009 and continued in a public hearing on September 14, 2009. At that time,
counsel for the Ministers advised that they wished to present information to
the Court in a closed hearing. The proceedings were adjourned for closed
hearings, conducted over the following two weeks during which the Court
considered and authorized the disclosure of public summaries of a new CSIS
threat assessment and a CBSA risk assessment. In the course of those hearings,
additional issues arose which required the postponement of the public condition
review proceedings. At the request of the respondent, on October 5, 2009 they
were adjourned sine die pending the outcome of the reasonableness
determination.
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
[54]
The
relevant legislative provisions for the purposes of this case are set out in
Divisions 4 and 9 of Part 1 of IRPA. Division 4 sets out the rules for
determining, in general, inadmissibility to Canada. Division 9 deals with certificates and the
protection of information. It will be necessary also to touch briefly on
sections of the Criminal Code and the United Nations Convention
against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment.
[55]
It
is well established that non-citizens do not have an unqualified right to enter
or remain in the country: Chiarelli v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration),
[1992] 1 S.C.R. 711, [1992] S.C.J. No. 27. Permanent residents enjoy a
qualified right to remain so long as they comply with any conditions imposed
under the Regulations enacted under the Act; foreign nationals who are not
permanent residents may be permitted to remain only on a temporary basis.
[56]
Parliament has the constitutional authority to define the
terms under which non-citizens, such as Mr. Almrei, may enter and stay in Canada and
the Executive has the duty to enforce those terms and in doing so, may exercise
considerable discretion, subject to the principles of fairness, to determine
whether it is advisable for a non-citizen to be removed. Deportation does
not, in itself, violate a
non-citizen’s rights under the Charter: Medovarski v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2005] 2 S.C.R. 539,
[2005] S.C.J. No. 31, at paragraph 56. But actions associated with the
deportation of a non-citizen, such as the procedures employed in the
certificate process, may do so: Charkaoui I, above at paragraph 65.
[57]
Both
permanent residents and foreign nationals are inadmissible to Canada for security concerns,
for violating human or international rights, serious criminality, organized
criminality or for misrepresentation (Division 4 of IRPA – Inadmissibility).
Security certificates may only be issued in respect of a permanent resident or
foreign national.
Inadmissibility
[58]
Section 34 of IRPA identifies those persons who are
inadmissible on security grounds. It reads as follows:
s.34
(1) A permanent resident or a foreign national is
inadmissible on security grounds for
|
art.34
(1) Emportent interdiction de territoire pour raison de
sécurité les faits suivants :
|
(a) engaging
in an act of espionage or an act of subversion against a democratic
government, institution or process as they are understood in Canada;
|
a) être l’auteur d’actes d’espionnage ou se livrer à la
subversion contre toute institution démocratique, au sens où cette expression
s’entend au Canada;
|
(b) engaging in or instigating the subversion by force of
any government;
|
b) être l’instigateur ou l’auteur d’actes visant au
renversement d’un gouvernement par la force;
|
(c) engaging in terrorism;
|
c) se livrer au terrorisme;
|
(d) being a danger to the security of Canada;
|
d) constituer un danger pour la sécurité du Canada;
|
(e) engaging in acts of violence that would or might
endanger the lives or safety of persons in Canada;
or
|
e) être l’auteur de tout acte de violence susceptible de
mettre en danger la vie ou la sécurité d’autrui au Canada;
|
(f) being a
member of an organization that there are reasonable grounds to believe
engages, has engaged or will engage in acts referred to in paragraph (a), (b)
or (c).
|
f) être membre d’une organisation dont il y a des motifs
raisonnables de croire qu’elle est, a été ou sera l’auteur d’un acte visé aux
alinéas a), b) ou c).
|
[59]
Where a security certificate asserts inadmissibility on
more than one ground, each ground must be read disjunctively. If any one ground
is established, the certificate is to be determined to be reasonable: Zundel
(Re), 2005 FC 295, [2005] F.C.J. No. 314, at paragraphs 16 and 17.
[60]
In this case, paragraphs 34(1) (a) (b) and (e) of IRPA have
no application. The allegations against Mr. Almrei are that he constitutes a
danger to the security of Canada as set out in paragraph 34(1)(d), has engaged
in terrorism contrary to paragraph 34(1)(c) and is a member of an organization
as described in paragraph 34(1)(f). He is said to have engaged in terrorism
only in a broad sense in that by participating in the Afghan jihad and
supporting Ibn al Khattab’s Chechen jihad, he associated with and supported
persons who are believed on reasonable grounds to have committed terrorist acts
and is therefore complicit in those acts. He is alleged to share the ideology
of Osama Bin Laden and has or is prepared to offer material support to an
organization, the “Bin Laden Network” which has engaged in terrorism. There is
no allegation that Almrei has directly engaged in any act of violence that
might endanger the lives or safety of any person in Canada.
[61]
These matters are mixed questions of fact and law: Poshteh
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) (F.C.A.), 2005 FCA 85, [2005] F.C.J. No. 381 (“Poshteh”).
It is a question of law what the statute or legal principle means and a
question of fact what the evidence discloses. A mixed question of fact and law
requires the application of the statute or principle to the facts.
[62]
In this case, legal issues include the interpretation of
the terms "member" and “organization” in paragraph 34(1)(f) and
“danger to the security of Canada” in paragraph 34 (1) (d).
It is then a question of mixed question of fact and law whether Almrei falls
within the scope of those provisions: Mendoza v. Canada (Minister
of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2007 FC 934, 317 F.T.R. 118,
at paragraphs.12-14.
“Member of an
Organization”
[63]
There is no definition of these terms in the statute and
the courts have not attempted a precise and exhaustive interpretation of their
meaning. As was stated by Justice Rothstein in Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) v. Singh 1998
CanLII 8281 (F.C.), (1998), 151 F.T.R. 101 (F.C.T.D.), at paragraph 52:
The provisions deal with subversion and terrorism. The
context in immigration legislation is public safety and national security, the
most serious concerns of government. It is trite to say that terrorist
organizations do not issue membership cards. There is no formal test for
membership and members are not therefore easily identifiable. The Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration may, if not detrimental to the national interest,
exclude an individual from the operation of subparagraph 19(1)(f)(iii)(B). I
think it is obvious that Parliament intended the term "member" to be
given an unrestricted and broad interpretation.
[64]
The Federal Court of Appeal cited this passage with
approval in Poshteh, above, at paragraphs 27 to 29. In Chiau
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2001] F.C. 297, [2000]
F.C.J. No. 2043, the Court of Appeal held that being a member means simply
"belonging" to an organization. This Court has consistently applied
an unrestricted and broad interpretation to the meaning of "member": Ahani
(Re), (1998), 146 F.T.R. 223, [1998] F.C.J. No. 507; Ikhlef (Re),
2002 FCT 263, [2002] F.C.J. No. 352; Harkat (Re), 2005 FC 393, [2005]
F.C.J. No. 481.
[65]
The meaning of "organization" has attracted less
judicial attention as the issue in most cases in which the term is applied is
not whether the organization actually exists, which is normally not in dispute,
but whether it has been responsible for terrorist acts: see for example Jalil
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 568, [2007]
F.C.J. No. 763. In this case, the existence of a “Bin Laden Network”, as broad
as the Ministers characterize it, is a matter of controversy between the
parties.
[66]
It is accepted in the jurisprudence that terrorist
organizations are “loosely structured groups that do not apply the niceties of
agency law”, as Justice Rothstein said in Husein
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) [1999] F.C.J. No. 1375 at
paragraph 5. In Ikhlef, above, at paragraph 64, Justice Blais, as he was
then, referred to an organization as "a community of interests and
thoughts and regular meetings with persons who were pursuing the same
goals".
[67]
In Thanaratnam
v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FC 349, [2004] 3 F.C.R. 301, rev’d on
other grounds, 2005 FCA 122, [2006] 1 F.C.R. 474 (Thanaratnam
FC) at paragraph 31, Justice James O’Reilly identified the characteristics
of an organization as “identity, leadership, a loose hierarchy and a
basic organizational structure”. In Sittampalam v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FCA 326, [2007] 3 F.C.R. 198 at
paragraph 38, Justice Linden endorsed these factors
as helpful in making a determination under s. 37 but considered that no one of
them is essential. He held that an “unrestricted and broad”
interpretation should be given to “organization” (at paragraph 36).
[68]
There is no temporal nexus in the statute between
membership in the organization and the timeframe in which terrorist acts may be
attributed to the group. A current lack of dangerousness does not avail the
named person if he is found to be a member. The question is whether the person
is or has been a member of that organization, not whether the person was a
member when the organization carried out its terrorist acts: Al Yamani v.
Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2006 FC
1457, [2006] F.C.J. No. 1826, at paras. 11-13; Jaballah (Re), 2006 FC
1230, [2006] F.C.J. No. 1706, at para. 38; Sittampalam, above, at paragraph
20.
[69]
The effect of the statute and this line of authority is,
therefore, that if I find that Mr. Almrei was at any time a member of an
organization that there are reasonable grounds to believe has engaged in
terrorism at some time in the past, he is inadmissible and a finding that he is
no longer a member would be to no avail. The question may remain open whether
the organization which committed the terrorist acts is the same organization as
that to which the member belonged at the relevant times: Gebreab v. Canada
(Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness) 2009
FC 1213.
“Terrorism”
[70]
“Terrorism” is not defined in the statute. The term has
also been given an unrestricted and broad interpretation in the jurisprudence. In Suresh v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2002 SCC 1, [2002]
S.C.J. No. 3 at paragraph 98, the Supreme Court defined the word, in the
context of the former Act and, following the language of the International
Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism, as including:
…any
“act intended to cause death or serious bodily injury to civilians, or to any
other person not taking an active part in the hostilities in a situation of
armed conflict when the purpose of such act, by its nature or context, is to
intimidate a population, or to compel a government or an international
organization to do or abstain from doing any act”. This definition catches the
essence of what the world understands by “terrorism”. Particular cases on
the fringes of terrorist activity will inevitably provoke disagreement.
(Emphasis added)
[71]
Any attempt to define “terrorism” in the immigration
context must also now take into account the definition of “terrorist activity”
found in subsection 83.01(1) of the Criminal Code: Soe v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 671, [2007]
F.C.J. No. 913. That definition is in two parts. The first part links the
meaning of the term to the commission of certain listed offences enacted by Canada in
the course of domestic ratification of international conventions and treaties
against terrorism.
[72]
The second part of the definition of terrorist activity in
the Criminal Code, includes a number of elements which require proof of
political, religious or ideological purpose, an intention to intimidate or
compel action or inaction on the part of a government, organization or person
and harmful consequences such as death, serious property damage or interference
with essential services.
[73]
The motive clause of the definition, paragraph 83.01 (1)
(b) (i) (A), was found to be unconstitutional by Mr. Justice Rutherford of the
Ontario Superior Court in R v. Khawaja, [2006] O.J. No. 4245. That
decision was expressly not followed by Mr. Justice Patillo of the same court in
United States of America v. Nadarajah, [2009] O.J. No. 946, an
extradition case. For the purposes of these proceedings, I do not consider it
necessary to express an opinion on that issue.
[74]
As I understand the Ministers’ case, there are no
allegations against Mr. Almrei that he committed any of the acts or omissions
that would constitute an offence under either part of the Criminal Code
definition. Rather the Ministers’ claim is that he engaged in terrorism
indirectly by participating in jihad and in supporting terrorist acts committed
by Afghans or Afghan Arabs in Afghanistan, Tajikistan,
Dagestan and Chechnya.
Armed conflict
exemption
[75]
Exempted from the Criminal Code definition of
terrorist activity is conduct committed during an armed conflict and that, at
the time and place of its commission, is in accordance with customary
international law or conventional international law applicable to the conflict,
or the activities undertaken by military forces of a state in the exercise of
their official duties, to the extent that those activities are governed by
other rules of international law. The armed conflict exemption is relevant in
these proceedings only in so far as it might apply to the actions of Afghan
mujahedin such as Abdul Rasul Sayyaf and to Afghan Arabs such as Ibn Khattab
with whom Almrei was associated.
[76]
Although the Public Summary does not include a direct
characterization of Ibn Khattab as a terrorist, the Ministers’ submissions
speak of his “terrorist activities” in Chechnya.
Sayyaf is said to have been complicit in the commission of war crimes against
the civilian population and to have sheltered and mentored terrorists who
passed through his camps. Mr. Almrei’s contacts with Khattab and Sayyaf are
proffered as evidence of his alleged “membership and complicity in terrorist
activities”. The respondent submits that, to the extent that he was involved
with Sayyaf and Khattab, and at the material times, if their activities are
covered by section 83.01, he should also be covered by this exemption.
[77]
In Khawaja, above, Mr. Justice Rutherford considered
that the acts falling within the exemption are only those ones which are
considered by the laws of war to be legitimate during such a conflict. He noted
that the provision is intended to remove from the ambit of the terrorism
provisions of the Criminal Code, acts which are necessarily a part of
war, so long as those war activities are conducted in accordance with the
customary or conventional rules of war, stating at paragraph 127:
The exception shields
those who do acts while engaged in an armed conflict that would otherwise fit
the definition of terrorist activity from prosecution as terrorists as long as
the acts are within the internationally recognized principles governing
warfare.
[78]
The Ministers submit that the activities of Sayyaf and
Khattab at issue in this proceeding fall outside the armed conflict exemption as the exemption does
not apply when the victims are persons not taking an active part in the
conflict. They point to provisions of the Geneva Conventions
and the Rome Statute which make it clear that terrorist activities are
prohibited during armed conflict: Fourth Geneva Convention; Article 33;
Protocol I, Article 51.2; Protocol II, Article 13.2. Causing terror to the
civilian population is prohibited under international humanitarian law and
constitutes a war crime under international criminal law: Prosecutor v.
Stanislav Galić, Case No.IT-98-29-A (ICTY).
[79]
The issue is, therefore, a question of mixed fact and law
whether acts committed in the course of an armed conflict would fall within the
legitimate scope of what is permitted under international law.
“Danger to
National Security”
[80]
The
meaning of “danger to national security”, as the expression appeared in the
former Act, was discussed by the Supreme Court in Suresh, above. The
Court observed, at paragraph 83, that the phrase was not synonymous with
membership in a terrorist movement although the two concepts may be related,
and, at paragraph 84, that it does not mean the same as danger to the public or
any member of the public. But paragraph 34 (1) (d) calls for a present finding
of dangerousness.
[81]
Subject to those qualifications, the Court said at
paragraph 85:
[w]e accept that a
fair, large and liberal interpretation in accordance with international norms
must be accorded to “danger to the security of Canada” in deportation legislation. We
recognize that “danger to the security of Canada” is difficult to define. We also accept that the
determination of what constitutes a “danger to the security of Canada” is highly fact-based
and political in a general sense. All this suggests a broad and flexible
approach to national security and, as discussed above, a deferential standard
of judicial review. Provided the Minister is able to show evidence that
reasonably supports a finding of danger to the security of Canada, courts should not
interfere with the Minister’s decision.
And at para. 90:
These
considerations lead us to conclude that a person constitutes a "danger to
the security of Canada" if he or she poses a serious threat to the
security of Canada, whether direct or indirect, and bearing in mind the fact
that the security of one country is often dependent on the security of other
nations. The threat must be "serious", in the sense that it must be
grounded on objectively reasonable suspicion based on evidence and in the sense
that the threatened harm must be substantial rather than negligible.
Burden of
Proof
[82]
As stated by the Federal Court of Appeal in Carillo v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FCA 94, [2008]
F.C.J. No. 399, at paragraph 16, the burden of proof, standard of proof and the
quality of the evidence necessary to meet the standard of proof are three
different factual realities and legal concepts which should not be confused. In
this case, there is no dispute between the parties that the evidentiary burden
and the legal burden of persuasion rest with the Ministers.
Quality of the
Evidence
[83]
The quality of the evidence required to meet the standard
of proof is
set out in paragraph 83(1)(h) of the statute. That provision authorizes the
judge to receive into evidence anything that, in the judge’s opinion, is
“reliable and appropriate” (“…digne de foi et utile”), even if it is
inadmissible in a court of law, and to base a decision on that evidence. Thus,
the best evidence rule does not apply and hearsay evidence such as that
provided to the Service by a human source or third party information collected
by a foreign or domestic intelligence or law enforcement agency may be relied
upon: Almrei (Re), 2009 FC 3, [2009] F.C.J. No. 1, at paragraph 53.
[84]
Both
official language versions of the statute are authoritative and require
consideration of the shared meaning of the two texts: R. v. Daoust,
[2004] 1 S.C.R. 217, [2004] S.C.J. No. 7. "Appropriate"
("utile” in French) was the term used in the pre-Bill C-3 statute and in
this context has the sense of “proper”, “fitting” and “useful”: Shorter
Oxford English Dictionary, Fifth Edition; In French, the word “utile” means
“worthwhile”, “satisfies a need”; Le Petit Robert, 2006. I read the two
versions as requiring more than mere relevance. Evidence may be relevant but
not useful or fitting for a variety of reasons including the manner in which it
was obtained. This is reinforced where the term is coupled with
"reliable" (“digne de foi”) which imports a notion of “trustworthy”,
“safe”, “sure”, “worthy of belief”. In the criminal law context, the manner in
which evidence was obtained may make it unreliable as, for example, evidence
obtained through the use of torture, and may result in the denial of fair trial
rights: R. v. Hape, 2007 SCC 26, [2007] S.C.J.
No. 26, at
paragraph 109; R. v. Khelawon, 2006 SCC 57, [2006]
S.C.J. No. 57,
at paragraph 47. Parliament has expressly ordained that such information shall
not be considered reliable and appropriate in certificate proceedings: ss.
83(1.1).
[85]
Division 9 repeatedly refers to “information and other
evidence”. For the purposes of this part of IRPA, section 76 defines “information”
(“renseignements”) as security or criminal intelligence information and information that
is obtained in confidence from a source in Canada, the government of a foreign state or an
international organization or an institution of such foreign state or
organization.
Standard of Proof
[86]
Under subsection 77(1), the Ministers may only issue a warrant
for the arrest and detention of a person named in a certificate if they have
reasonable grounds to believe that the person is a danger to national security
or to the safety of any person or is unlikely to appear at a proceeding or for
removal (IRPA, s.81).
[87]
Under the marginal note “Rules of Interpretation”, section
33 of IRPA provides that the facts that constitute inadmissibility under
section 34 include facts arising from omissions and, unless otherwise provided,
include facts for which there are reasonable grounds to believe that they have
occurred, are occurring or may occur.
[88]
The Supreme Court of Canada has determined that “reasonable
grounds to believe” requires an objective basis for
the belief in the alleged facts based on compelling and credible information: Suresh,
above, at para. 90;
R v. Zeolkowski, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1378, [1989] S.C.J. No. 50, at page
1385.
[89]
Justice
Dubé in Chiau v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] 2 F.C. 642
(T.D.), [1998] F.C.J. No. 131, at paragraph 27, described the standard of proof
required to establish “reasonable grounds” as:
… more than a flimsy
suspicion, but less than the civil test of balance of probabilities. And, of
course, a much lower threshold than the criminal standard of "beyond a
reasonable doubt". It is a bona fide belief in a serious possibility based
on credible evidence.
[90]
Justice Simon Noël further explained the standard as
follows in Charkaoui (Re), 2005 FC 248, [2005] F.C.J. No. 269, at
paragraph 30:
The "reasonable
grounds" standard requires more than suspicions. It also requires more
than a mere subjective belief on the part of the person relying on them. The
existence of reasonable grounds must be established objectively, that is, that
a reasonable person placed in similar circumstances would have believed that
reasonable grounds existed:
[91]
The standard is, therefore, somewhere between "mere
suspicion" and the balance of probabilities. It is higher than the
standard applied in the control order cases in the United Kingdom which
requires reasonable grounds for suspecting involvement in terrorism
related activity: see for example Secretary of State for the Home Department
v. AF and Another, [2009] UKHL 28 [SSHD v. AF], at paragraphs 62-63. The
habeas corpus proceedings relating to Guantanamo
detainees are being conducted in the U.S. District Court on a preponderance of
the evidence standard: Al Mutairi v. United States, 2009 WL 2364173,
(D.D.C. July 29, 2009).
[92]
The Ministers contend that the Court’s determination should
also be made on the reasonable grounds to believe standard. The respondent’s
position is that it should be the normal civil standard of proof on a balance
of probabilities: F.H. v. McDougall, 2008 SCC 53, [2008] S.C.J. No. 54,
at paragraph 40. He argues that the amendments contained in Bill C-3 which have
changed the Court’s role from a review of the reasonableness of the Ministers'
opinion to a determination of the present reasonableness of the certificate
calls for a higher standard. Moreover, he contends, application of the lower
standard would not satisfy the fundamental justice requirements of section 7 of
the Charter.
[93]
In
reviewing the role of the designated judge in certificate cases, the Supreme
Court has noted that as IRPA subsection 82(1), now section 81, provided that
the Ministers’ decision to detain a permanent resident was based on “reasonable
grounds to believe”, it is “…logical to assume…” that the same standard would
be used by the judge reviewing the detention: Charkaoui 1, para. 39. The
Ministers' position, contested by the respondent, is that this is conclusive
authority for the application of the same standard to the reasonableness
determination. I am not so sure. The Supreme Court’s reference to
“reasonableness” as the standard for determination of the certificate issue in
the same paragraph appears to recognize that there is a difference.
[94]
Where the legislation requires “reasonable grounds to
believe” a certain fact, the standard has been interpreted as meaning that
proof of that fact itself is not required. Evidence that falls short of
establishing the fact will be sufficient if it is enough to show reasonable
grounds for a belief in the fact: Canada v. Jolly, [1975] F.C. 216
(C.A.) at pp. 225-226.
[95]
Jolly was a case under s. 5(1) of the former
Act, in which the Federal Court of Appeal addressed the inadmissibility of a
person who was a member of an organization or group “concerning which there
were reasonable grounds for believing that it promotes or advocates …
subversion by force”. At paragraph 18 the Court stated:
… But where the fact to be ascertained on the evidence is
whether there are reasonable grounds for such a belief, rather than the
existence of the fact itself, it seems to me that to require proof of the fact
itself and proceed to determine whether it has been established is to demand
the proof of a different fact from that required to be ascertained. It seems to
me that the use by the statute of the expression "reasonable grounds
for believing" implies that the fact itself need not be established and
that evidence which falls short of proving the subversive character of the
organization will be sufficient if it is enough to show reasonable grounds for
believing that the organization is one that advocates subversion by force, etc.
At paragraph 22, the Court of
Appeal observed that:
Subsection 5(l) does
not prescribe a standard of proof but a test to be applied for determining
admissibility of an alien to Canada, and the question to be decided was
whether there were reasonable grounds for believing, etc., and not the fact
itself of advocating subversion by force, etc. No doubt one way of showing
that there are no reasonable grounds for believing a fact is to show that the
fact itself does not exist. But even when prima facie evidence negativing
the fact itself had been given by the respondent there did not arise an onus on
the Minister to do more than show that there were reasonable grounds for
believing in the existence of the fact. In short as applied to this case it
seems to me that even after prima facie evidence negativing the fact had been
given it was only necessary for the Minister to lead evidence to show the
existence of reasonable grounds for believing the fact and it was not necessary
for him to go further and establish the fact itself of the subversive character
of the organization…
(Emphasis added)
[96]
The passage quoted from paragraph 18 of Jolly
has been relied upon in subsequent jurisprudence as setting the bar below the
civil standard. I would have no difficulty with that in the context of a
judicial review of the adequacy of the Minister’s grounds for making an
inadmissibility determination. But that is not this case. The Court is
assessing the reasonableness of the certificate on all of the evidence. In my
view, the notion in paragraph 22 of Jolly that the Minister need not
meet a prima facie case to the contrary can not be relied upon post-Charkaoui
I and the enactment of Bill C-3. Jolly was decided in an era prior
to the Charter when public interest immunity was absolute and judges did
not examine classified information.
[97]
In two cases dealing with an exclusion clause employing the
phrase, “serious reasons to consider”, the Federal Court of Appeal considered
that it was analogous to “reasonable grounds to believe” and that both were
less than the civil standard: Ramirez v. Canada, [1992] 2 F.C. 306
(C.A.); Moreno v. Canada, [1994] 1 F.C. 298 (C.A.). In Moreno,
Justice Robertson said, at paragraph 17, that this type of legislative language
should be regarded as a threshold rather than a standard of proof. In his
view, as stated at paragraphs 21-22, not all exclusion clause issues could be
resolved by the “less than civil law” standard and that it should be confined
to questions of fact. This conclusion was endorsed by the Supreme Court of
Canada in Mugasera, above, at paras. 114-116.
[98]
There is support in the jurisprudence for the position
advanced by the respondent that the standard of proof should be the normal
civil standard. In Singh, above, at para. 3, the Court held that the
legal standard of proof was a balance of probabilities citing two Federal Court
decisions under the former statute: Farahi-Mahdavieh (Re), (1993), 63
F.T.R. 120, [1993] F.C.J. No. 285 and Al Yamani v. Canada, (1995), 103
F.T.R. 105, [1995] F.C.J. No. 1453, at paras. 64 and 65.
[99]
Singh and Farahi-Mahdavieh were
inadmissibility determinations under the certificate process in the former Act.
Al-Yamani was a judicial review of an inadmissibility decision of the
Security Intelligence Review Committee. In Farahi-Mahdavieh, Justice
Denault applied the standard articulated in Jolly. In Al Yamani,
Justice MacKay dismissed an argument that a standard higher than that of the
normal balance of probabilities was required holding, as the Supreme Court has
recently confirmed in McDougall, above, that there is only one civil
standard.
[100] In Re
Harkat, 2005 FC 393, [2005] F.C.J. No. 481, a decision which followed the
enactment of the IRPA, Justice Dawson held at paragraph 42, that while the
legal test was reasonable grounds to believe, the standard of proof was
separate and was proof on a balance of probabilities. Justice MacKay observed
in Jaballah (Re), 2006 FC 1230, [2006] F.C.J. No. 1706 at
paragraph 65, that the threshold of “reasonable grounds to believe” does not require
proof on a balance of probabilities; rather it connotes a degree of
probability, i.e. a bona fide belief in a serious possibility, based on
credible evidence. At paragraph 68, he stated:
Thus, whether facts
alleged and established on the basis of the threshold of "a reasonable
ground to believe" fall within the statutory provisions of s-s. 34(1) may
depend on the quality and cogency of the evidence. The question for the Court
is to assess whether that evidence, and the weight accorded to it, will lead to
the conclusion that the requisite standard of proof is met to support a finding
that the facts fall within the conduct prescribed by the statute…
[101] I am
of the view that “reasonable grounds to believe” in s. 33 implies a threshold
or test for establishing the facts necessary for an inadmissibility
determination which the Ministers' evidence must meet at a minimum, as
discussed by Robertson, J.A. in Moreno, above. When there has been
extensive evidence from both parties and there are competing versions of the
facts before the Court, the reasonableness standard requires a weighing of the
evidence and findings of which facts are accepted. A certificate can not be
held to be reasonable if the Court is satisfied that the preponderance of the
evidence is to the contrary of that proffered by the Ministers.
[102] The
Ministers submit that, in applying the reasonableness standard, some deference
is owed to their determination that the named person poses a danger to national
security. They cite the following statement at paragraph 85 of Suresh:
Provided the Minister
is able to show evidence that reasonably supports a finding of danger to the
security of Canada, courts should not interfere with the Minister’s decision.
[103] The Supreme Court in Suresh
was conducting a standard of review analysis. They concluded that the factors
of relative expertise and access to special information in matters of national
security favoured deference to the Minister’s risk assessment, citing Lord
Hoffman’s
speech to that effect in Secretary of State
for the Home Department v. Rehman, [2001] 3 W.L.R. 877 (H.L.), at para. 62.
Much has changed in the past eight years, including the Supreme Court’s
decision in Charkaoui I and the House of Lords decision in the Belmarsh
case in which they resiled from the Rehman dictum where the question to
be determined is legal as opposed to political: A & others v. Secretary
of State for the Home Department, [2004] UKHL 56.
[104] In Charkaoui 1,
at paragraph 38, the Supreme Court observed that Judges were correct to eschew
an overly deferential approach in security certificate cases given the nature
of the proceedings. And at paragraph 39 it was stated that "[t] he IRPA
does not ask the designated judge to be deferential, but, rather, asks him or
her to engage in a searching review."
[105] Here, the Court is
making a fresh determination based on all of the information and other
evidence presented including additional material which was not before the
Ministers. The Court, as a result of Charkaoui II, has had access to operational
and human source management information not previously made available. In
the closed sessions, the information relied upon by the Ministers was called
into question and the Court heard evidence about the manner in which the SIR
was prepared. Having reviewed all of the information and evidence, I consider
that little deference is owed to the Ministers decision.
Procedure
[106] When
a certificate is signed by the Ministers stating that a permanent resident or a
foreign national is inadmissible on grounds of security, they are required
under section 77 of IRPA to refer the certificate to the Federal Court and file
the “information and other evidence” on which the certificate is based and a
summary of that information and other evidence that enables a person named in
the certificate to be reasonably informed of the case but that does not include
anything that, in the Minister's opinion, would be injurious to national
security or endanger the safety of any person if disclosed. Under section 78,
the judge shall determine whether the certificate is reasonable and shall quash
it if he or she determines that it is not.
[107] The
Supreme Court has repeatedly recognized the justification for security
intelligence information to be kept secret in order to protect national
security: Chiarelli, above at paragraph 58; Ruby
v. Canada (Solicitor
General), [2002] 4 S.C.R. 3, [2002] S.C.J. No. 73, at
paragraph 43 and 44. That imperative may require a departure from the normal
disclosure practices which allow a person, whom the state seeks to remove, to
know the case that has to be met. The right to know the case to be met is not
absolute: Charkaoui I, at paragraph 57.
[108] In the context of a security certificate proceeding where removal may
place the person at risk of torture or death, the right to a fair hearing
requires that the necessary information is provided or a substantial substitute
is found to compensate for non-disclosure: Charkaoui I, above at
paragraphs 61 and 139. Parliament has responded with the enactment of the Special
Advocate regime as a substantial substitute for complete disclosure.
[109] Under paragraph 83(1)(a)
of IRPA , the judge shall proceed as informally and expeditiously (“…sans
formalisme et selon la procédure expéditive”) as the circumstances and
considerations of fairness and natural justice permit.
[110] The Court may, and on
the application of the Ministers, shall hear information or other evidence in
the absence of the public and of the named person and his counsel if, in the
opinion of the judge, its disclosure could be injurious to national security or
endanger the safety of any person: paragraph 83(1)(c) of IRPA.
[111] The Court shall ensure
that the named person is provided with a summary of the information and other
evidence that enables them to be reasonably informed (“…suffisamment informé…”)
of the Minister’s case but that does not include anything that the judge
believes would be injurious to national security or put someone in danger:
paragraph 83(1)(e) of IRPA. A decision can be rendered on the information and
evidence even if a summary has not been provided to the named person: paragraph
83(1)(i).
Role of the Special Advocates
[112] The
Special Advocates role in these proceedings is to protect the interests of the
subject of the security certificate when information or other evidence is heard
in the closed proceedings. Special Advocates may challenge the Ministers’
claim that the disclosure of information would be injurious to national
security or endanger the safety of any person and they may challenge the
relevance, reliability and sufficiency of the undisclosed information and the
weight to be given to it: s. 85.1 of IRPA. They may make oral and written
submissions with respect to the undisclosed evidence and participate in a cross
examine any witness who testifies in the closed proceedings: s. 85.2 of IRPA.
The Ministers are obliged to provide the Special Advocates with a copy of all
of the undisclosed information and other evidence provided to the judge: ss.
85.4 (1) of IRPA.
[113] The
Special Advocates are prohibited from communicating with any person about the
proceeding once they have had disclosure of the information or other evidence
without the authorization of the judge: sections 85.4 (2) and 85.5 of IRPA.
This limits the ability of the Special Advocates to obtain information and
receive instructions from the named person and his counsel.
THE ISSUES
[114] The
overarching issue is whether the certificate signed by the Ministers on
February 22, 2008 in relation to Hassan Almrei is reasonable. Within the scope
of that framework, the parties identified a number of factual and legal issues.
[115] The
respondent launched a broadly based challenge to the constitutional validity of
the legislative scheme enacted through Bill C-3. He contends that the new
regime does not cure the constitutional defects identified by the Supreme Court
of Canada in Charkaoui 1 and, as a result, he was denied fundamental
justice as guaranteed by section 7 of the Charter.
[116] In
particular, Mr. Almrei submits that the limitations on communications between
the named persons and the Special Advocates after the latter have seen the
closed information renders the new procedure ineffective as a reasonable
alternative to full disclosure. He contends that the reasonable grounds to
believe standard of proof is constitutionally inadequate and that the Charter
requires nothing less than the normal civil standard. The search of his
apartment in 2000 by CIC officers and the seizure of a false passport in his
possession is said to have breached his right to protection against
unreasonable search and seizure under s.8 of the Charter.
[117] Due
to the nature of the information and other evidence in this case, and the steps
that were taken to authorize communication where it was necessary, the
respondent was not, in my view, denied fundamental justice and the Special
Advocates were not hampered in performing their functions by the statutory
restrictions on communication. The process worked as it was intended to by
Parliament.
[118] In
light of the conclusions that I have reached on the factual issues, I do not
consider it necessary to decide whether the new regime, as a whole, passes
constitutional scrutiny. Similarly, as I have found that the certificate is not
reasonable I do not need to determine whether the Charter requires the
application of the balance of probabilities standard. I think it best to leave
those questions to be addressed in another case where there may be a more
suitable factual foundation and live controversy.
[119] With
respect to the validity of the 2000 search and seizure, a decision on that
issue would not affect the outcome of this case. Nor is there sufficient
evidence before the Court on the circumstances and the manner in which the
search was conducted to arrive at a well-grounded opinion. I am also of the
view that the respondent has implicitly waived his right to object to the
search nine years after the event.
[120] The
issues that I intend to address in these reasons are as follows:
1.
Are the allegations against Almrei supported by the
information and other evidence presented to the Court?
2.
Should the certificate be quashed as an abuse of process?
THE ALLEGATIONS
[121] The certificate signed
by Ministers on February 22, 2008 states that Almrei is inadmissible to Canada
by reason of paragraphs 34(1)(c), 34(1)(d) and 34(1)(f) of the IRPA – in
essence that there are reasonable grounds to believe that Almrei will engage in
or has engaged in terrorism, is a danger to the security of Canada and is a
member of an organization that there are reasonable grounds to believe will
engage in, or, is or was engaged in terrorism.
[122] The grounds for the
certificate are set out in the SIR and A/SIR, the Statement Summarizing the
Information (the “Public Summary”), and the Amended Summary with additional
information filed with the Court on March 25, 2009. The Amended Summary states
that based on the information obtained from unclassified
sources, human sources, intercepts, physical surveillance and information from
foreign and domestic agencies, the Service believes that:
(a) Almrei
supports the extremist Islamist ideology espoused by Osama Bin Laden, that he
has connections to persons who share that ideology and that, through his
involvement in an international document forgery ring, has the ability and
capacity to facilitate the movement of those persons in Canada and abroad who would commit terrorist acts.
(b) Osama
Bin Laden is the leader of an international terrorist network of groups and
individuals committed to the use of violence to attain their political
objectives, and Bin Laden has established substantial ties through alliances
and cooperation with other extremist groups.
(c) The
methodology of Al Qaeda’s leadership has shifted since September 11, 2001.
Operations have been carried out by distinct terrorist groups affiliated with
Al Qaeda through their training experiences in Afghanistan
or direct connection to Al Qaeda’s mid-level leadership, or by autonomous units
that adhere to Al Qaeda’s core principles but do not have any direct
connections to Bin Laden.
(d) Some
scholars and academics believe that Al Qaeda is no longer a
centrally-controlled organization, but recognize that its ideology lives on and
that Bin Laden remains a powerful figurehead and inspiration for people around
the world. Others believe that Al Qaeda remains a viable entity and may be
regrouping in order to spark a new wave of attacks.
(e) The
Bin Laden Network, through Al Qaeda, operated terrorist training camps in
Afghanistan, Pakistan and Sudan, with cells in Somalia and Kenya.
(f) Graduates
of the camps have been dispatched to conflicts around the world to support
various Islamist groups and causes, including Chechen rebels fighting Russia.
(g) Other
terrorist organizations have adopted the Al Qaeda brand name and they operate
outside the Afghanistan-Pakistan Al Qaeda core area.
(h) Thousands
of people have been inspired by the Al Qaeda ideology. They act locally, but
see their operations as part of a greater whole, as defined by Al Qaeda, which
in turn utilizes these groups as part of its global strategy.
(i) Eighteen
individuals arrested in the summer of 2006 in the Greater Toronto Area and
accused of terrorism offences, allegedly established training camps north of Toronto to practise military-inspired exercises. They had no formal
affiliation to Al Qaeda but were believed to be inspired by Al Qaeda ideology.
(j) Al
Qaeda and its followers are adept at using the internet as a means of
communicating with each other securely and quickly, and use the internet for
recruitment, indoctrination, fund raising and propaganda.
(k) In
support of its clandestine actions, members of the Bin Laden Network use
aliases and false documents, particularly passports, and manipulate official
processes such as legal name changes, marriages of convenience and the arrival
to a State without documents and registration under a false name in order to
obtain official documents under new identities.
(l) Canadian
citizens Abderraouf Jdey and Faker Boussora, who stated their intention to be
involved in a martyrdom mission, are unknown and there is a strong likelihood
that both are using false identities to remain undetected.
(m) The
misuse of passports and other documents is intrinsically connected with
international terrorism. Terrorist groups and their operatives need to travel
to plan and commit attacks. Surreptitious travel is facilitated by using false
or improperly obtained documents.
(n) Bin
Laden has misappropriated donations made to Muslim charitable organizations in
order to allow the Bin Laden Network to operate without the material support of
a government or state sponsor.
(o) The
Bin Laden Network has displayed a high level of security consciousness and is
careful with communications so as to avoid detection, including the use of noms
de guerre.
(p) Canada has been named as a legitimate target of attack on six
occasions by Al Qaeda and groups or individuals linked to Al Qaeda.
(q) In
June 2007, at the graduation of approximately 300 apparently newly trained
suicide bombers at a terrorist training camp, a Taliban commander announced
that Canadian interests were all viable targets and that the recent graduates
would be deployed to Canada.
(r) Despite
the dispersion of the Al Qaeda leadership and the group’s reduced ability to
centrally organize and control operations, Al Qaeda issues audio or video tapes
which are widely distributed in the Arab and Muslim world and which serve to
motivate fellow Muslims to take up the jihadist cause.
(s) Almrei
has lied to Canadian officials, tribunals and Courts about his travel before
coming to Canada.
(t) The
Bin Laden Network is founded on the commitment of its members to its leader and
his ideals held together by bonds of kinship. Almrei shares these bonds and
has demonstrated his support of Bin Laden, those associated with or sponsored
by him and his ideology.
(u) Almrei
is associated with Arab Afghans connected to the Bin Laden network including
Ibn Khattab, Nabil Almarabh, Ahmed al Kaysee and Hoshem al Taha.
(v) Almrei
is able to and has international connections to procure false documentation; he
obtained a false Canadian passport for Nabil Almarabh, he knew individuals in
Montreal who could obtain false documents, he travelled to Thailand and met a
human smuggler and discussed false passports with him, he arranged a marriage
of convenience in Canada, he made referrals for United States (“U.S.”) and
Canadian driver’s licences, and a person he knew was detained in the U.S. in
2001 with thirteen packages of identity documents including passports.
(w) Almrei
has demonstrated concern for his security and an understanding of security
procedures.
THE “INFORMATION AND OTHER EVIDENCE”:
Overview:
[123] As
discussed above, Division 9 of the IRPA provides that the judge presiding over
the review of a certificate may receive into evidence and base a decision on
anything that is reliable and appropriate, even if it is inadmissible in a
court of law. This can include information from open and covert sources. In
this case, the Ministers based their allegations against Mr. Almrei on
information collected from a variety of sources as described in the Security
Intelligence Reports and Public Summaries.
[124] The Security
Intelligence Reports or SIRs filed in this case, were prepared by CSIS as part
of its duties under section 14 of the Canadian Security Intelligence Act,
R.S., 1985, c. C-23. Section 14 authorizes the Service to advise Ministers on
matters relating to the security of Canada and to provide them with information that is
relevant to the performance of their duties under IRPA.
[125] The SIR is not mentioned
in the Act. It is a narrative report consisting of assertions of fact drawn
from open sources and information provided by human sources, intercepted
communications, physical surveillance and foreign and domestic security and
intelligence agencies. Each assertion in the SIR is, according to CSIS policy,
to be evaluated for its relevance and reliability and ‘facted” or linked to a
documented covert or open reference held by the Service. The Public Summary,
prepared by CSIS on behalf of the Ministers, contains that portion of the
narrative which is deemed by the Service to be not injurious to national
security or to source protection with footnoted references to open sources.
[126] The SIR, the amended SIR
(“A/SIR”), the public summaries of both, together with volumes containing the
referenced open and covert sources and supplementary materials were all filed
with the Court for its use and that of the Special Advocates. The SIRs filed
with the Court contained colour highlighting indicating which information was
classified and withheld from Mr. Almrei and the public and that which was made
public in the summaries.
[127] The Ministers presented
testimony from Service officers in both the open and closed hearings and expert
opinion evidence from one witness in the public hearings. The respondent
testified on his own behalf and called several expert witnesses to give opinion
evidence in the public hearings. The public testimony and opinion evidence is
discussed below. The evidence presented in the closed hearings is discussed in
the closed reasons for judgment.
The
Open Source Information:
[128] The SIR, A/SIR and the
public summaries of both reports contain footnoted references to extensive
unclassified or open source material filed with the Court by the Ministers in
the form of indexed reference volumes. Much of this material is taken from
newspapers, magazines, scholarly journals and on-line sources not available in
print. Some 35 of the referenced reports were taken from sources available
solely on-line and more than 50 were articles from newspapers and other print
media sources. In addition, both parties filed numerous excerpts from open
source materials which were put to the witnesses during their testimony. The
reliability of some of this material became an issue in these proceedings. In
the closed proceedings, counsel entered documents into evidence that had been
produced as a result of the Charkaoui 2 orders.
[129] As the case proceeded
and the Court reviewed the open and closed information, it became apparent just
how little was known by western security intelligence agencies and scholars
about Al Qaeda and the jihadist movement in the months leading up to and
following the events of 9/11. As Thomas Hegghamer, of the Harvard Kennedy School and the Norwegian
Defence Research Establishment, has written:
We
were all frightened by the destruction caused on 9/11. Yet most of us… assumed
that there would be people in the intelligence services or in academia who
possessed detailed knowledge about the jihadists… How wrong we were… [I]t has
become increasingly clear how little was known about al-Qaeda back in 2001, and
how long it will take for us thoroughly to understand the dynamics of global
jihadism.
(Jihadi Studies:
Times Literary Supplement, April 4, 2008 p.15)
[130] Little attention had
been directed to the jihadi phenomenon by security intelligence analysts and
academic scholars. Hegghammer points out that the main contributions to the
literature on Al Qaeda in the first few years after 9/11 came from
investigative journalists, not academics or security specialists. This is
apparent from the information filed in this case.
[131] In the reaction to 9/11
and the “Global War on Terror” initiated by the US and its allies, there was a rapid proliferation
of instant experts and new organizations claiming knowledge in the field, as
several of the witnesses testified. In Hegghammer’s words, there was “a deluge
of writing in which truth was mixed with factoids and conspiracy theories”.
This was borne out by much of the material filed in these proceedings and from
the witnesses’ testimony. The Court’s task was, in part, to sort the fact from
the rumour and truth from the speculation in the filed material to determine
what was reliable and appropriate information and other evidence upon which a
decision could be rendered.
Third
Party Information:
[132] Division 9 of IRPA
permits the reception of information obtained in confidence from foreign
security intelligence and police agencies. CSIS sought information about Mr.
Almrei from a number of foreign agencies prior to and following his detention.
I have more to say about this in my closed judgment. For the public record, I
think it necessary to state that the responses from foreign agencies were
largely negative respecting Mr. Almrei. He was not known to be an extremist
suspect by the authorities in the jurisdictions canvassed.
[133] Relevant information was
provided by foreign agencies regarding the arrest, detention and ultimate
deportation of Nabil Almarabh from the United States and with respect to the respondent’s Thai
based contact, a Palestinian named Ghaleb, and his connections.
[134] Information was also
provided to CSIS by the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (F.B.I.) with
respect to Mr. Almarabh’s responses to questions that CSIS had requested be
posed to him regarding his relationship with Mr. Almrei while Mr. Almarabh was
in US custody. A summary of that information had been previously disclosed to
the respondent and his counsel. The full report was provided to the Court and
to the Special Advocates as a result of the October 10, 2008 production order.
The content of that report was relevant to the merits of the certificate and to
the motion by the Special Advocates to quash the certificate on the ground of a
breach of the duty of candour.
[135] As this Court has
previously observed, where the government wishes to protect material
information provided by a third party under caveat, the consent of the third
party to disclose the information should normally be sought: Khadr v. Canada
(Attorney General), 2008 FC 549, [2008] F.C.J. No. 770, at paragraphs
93-95. In this case, the Special Advocates had access to the closed third-party
information in the court file subject to the redaction of irrelevant content.
The respondent is also aware of the gist of the information and the allegations
relating to Almarabh and Ghaleb. He replied to these allegations in his
cross-examination of the government witnesses and in his testimony.
[136] In my view, disclosure
of the third party reports would have been injurious to Canada’s national security as
the information was provided in confidence under protective caveats. Given that
the essential facts were already part of the public record, I did not consider
it necessary in this case to direct that the Service seek consent to disclosure
from the foreign agencies that provided the information. I was also mindful of
the obligation under the statute to conduct the proceedings in an expeditious
manner. This decision was communicated to Mr. Almrei and his counsel on June
10, 2009.
[137] Information was also
provided to the Service by the RCMP, the Department of Citizenship and
Immigration Canada (CIC) and Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA). RCMP reports
of information received from human sources shared with CSIS were disclosed to
the Court and to the Special Advocates. As the reliability of the sources could
not be determined and the information was vague and unsubstantiated, those
reports carried very little weight and were not relied upon by CSIS in the
preparation of the SIR and A/SIR.
[138] During the course of the
proceedings certain reports prepared by the RCMP and CIC were provided to the
Court and the Special Advocates, and with the redaction of non-material and
sensitive information, disclosed to the respondent and his counsel. The factual
accuracy of these reports became an issue in the open proceedings.
[139] CIC/CBSA information
used in the SIR and A/SIR included reports on the information provided by
Almrei in support of his unsuccessful visa application in 1998 and upon his
entry in 1999. It includes a report on the search conducted at Almrei’s
apartment on September 13, 2000 when CIC officers attempted to arrest his
roommate on a departure order. This report contained erroneous information about
Almrei’s refugee claim. Another report concerned a CIC file for an individual
linked to Almrei; a Syrian male with Afghan experience who had traveled to the United States on altered and false
passports.
[140] An RCMP investigation
report in relation to certain events at Pearson Airport was produced late and only after repeated
requests. The significance of the report will be discussed below.
Telecommunications
Intercepts:
[141] The Ministers initially
relied on a handful of intercept reports in the SIR. Following a review of
these reports in the closed hearings, two were withdrawn by the Ministers upon
the Court’s finding that they were not relevant to the proceedings, as they
concerned other persons and the use of a communication technique not connected
to Mr. Almrei.
[142] Summaries of
conversations used in the A/SIR were approved by the Court and disclosed to Mr.
Almrei on April 17, 2009 (Exhibit A-13). In one of several conversations on
September 14, 2001 an unknown male spoke with Almrei addressing him as Abu al
Hareth and inquired about the contact numbers of a third person. This was,
apparently, the Service’s first confirmation that Almrei was known to his
friends and associates by the name, Abu Al Hareth. But he was well known by
that name within the Muslim community in Toronto and, indeed, the RCMP had been making inquiries
about him under that name.
[143] In the course of several
conversations on October 9, 2001, Almrei was told by an acquaintance he had
been followed that day by two men in a car who were, at the time of the
conversations, parked in front of the acquaintance’s building. Almrei was
advised not to visit the acquaintance the next day as they were both under
scrutiny. The acquaintance also spoke about providing funds to assist Almrei
with his lawyer’s fees. These intercepts, with other closed information, were
offered in support of the assertion that Almrei was security conscious and took
steps to avoid surveillance.
[144] On
April 24, 2009, summaries of intercepted communications that had been disclosed
to the Court and to the Special Advocates as part of the Charkaoui II
production, were disclosed to Mr. Almrei and the public in a volume filed as
Exhibit A-14. The summaries concerned some 55 conversations which took place on
and between September 12, 2001 and October 18, 2001 which were not relied upon
in the SIR and A/SIR as they contain no information in support of the
Ministers' case.
[145] Several
of these intercepts became relevant in the closed proceedings as the reports of
the communications intercepted by the Service proved to be inconsistent with
reports of information provided by human sources respecting conversations on
the same dates. In that respect, they were also relevant to the motion to quash
the certificate brought by the Special Advocates.
Physical
Surveillance Reports:
[146] Almrei
was under physical surveillance prior to his arrest and detention. Physical
surveillance reports referenced in the A/SIR were disclosed in Exhibit A-13 on
April 17, 2009. These concerned surveillance on September 17, 1999 and
September 19, 1999. The first report concerned events at Pearson airport which
will be discussed below. The second describes Almrei’s driving behaviour as he
was followed around Niagara Falls while he visited several
nightclubs and restaurants. This second report was relied upon in support of an
assertion that Almrei had exhibited security tradecraft in an effort to
determine whether he was being followed. Another interpretation, conveyed by
one of the surveillance teams, is that he was wandering around just to kill
time.
[147] The Charkaoui
II Order produced a considerable number of other physical surveillance
reports. The Ministers objected to their disclosure to the respondent on the
grounds that they contained no relevant information, would disclose covert
operational methods and surveillance techniques and were not relied upon in the
A/SIR. The Special Advocates considered that they were relevant if only to
demonstrate that Almrei’s behaviour on those dates had been innocuous. In the
result, an overview summary of the surveillance conducted between August 1999
and October 2001 was approved for disclosure to Mr. Almrei and the public and
forms part of Exhibit A-14.
[148] Several
of the physical surveillance reports proved to be highly relevant in the closed
proceedings in support of the motion to quash as their content was inconsistent
with information provided by a human source regarding Almrei’s movements and
contacts on specific dates. This will be discussed further below.
Information Obtained or Derived
from Torture or Cruel, Inhumane or Degrading Treatment
[149] As outlined above, IRPA
subsection 83(1.1) provides that reliable and appropriate evidence does not
include information that is believed on reasonable grounds to have been
obtained as a result of the use of torture within the meaning of section 269.1
of the Criminal Code or of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or
punishment within the meaning of the Convention Against Torture.
[150] Questions arose in these
proceedings as to whether any of the information in the SIR and A/SIR had been
obtained as a result of the use of torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment. From my review of the SIR and A/SIR, the records
disclosed in response to the October 10, 2008 order and the evidence presented
in the public and closed hearings, I was initially satisfied that the Ministers
did not rely upon information that had been obtained through the use of such
methods. The Special Advocates were authorized to communicate that view to Mr.
Almrei and his counsel so as to avoid the calling of unnecessary expert opinion
evidence during the public hearings about the treatment of certain high-level
detainees by the US and allied forces.
There were no such reports from such detainees claiming, for example, to have
seen Mr. Almrei in a place or places consistent with the government
allegations.
[151] During the public
hearings, however, it became apparent that some of the open source reference
documents contained information that was obtained by members of the US military or
intelligence agencies from detainees captured in the aftermath of 9/11. Based
on information in the public domain, the use of so-called “enhanced
interrogation methods” such as waterboarding had been approved by the former US administration for use
by US interrogators between 2002 and 2004.
[152] None of the documents in
question contained information implicating Mr. Almrei but had been included as
contextual reference material regarding Al Qaeda’s operations and methods. The
documents in question included several chapters of the 9/11 Commission Report.
An explanatory note in the Report states that chapters 5 and 7 contain
information obtained from the interrogations of certain named detainees.
Without deciding the matter, I concluded that it is open to the Court to find
that the information contained in those chapters of the Report, and similar US
documents, was obtained through the use of torture or cruel, inhuman or
degrading treatment as defined in the Code and the Convention and would not be
admissible evidence or information in security certificate proceedings under
IRPA, at subsection 83(1.1).
[153] When this issue was
raised during the public hearings counsel for the Ministers properly took the
position that they would no longer be relying upon the documents in question.
The Court has not, therefore, taken them into consideration in arriving at a
determination in these proceedings.
The
Human Source Information:
[154] The strength of the
Ministers’ case rests to a considerable extent on information provided to CSIS
by human sources. As presented to the Court, this information was drawn from
source reports maintained in the Service’s operational records database.
Statements in the A/SIR attributed to the sources are supported by footnoted
references to the reports which were reproduced in the classified reference
materials filed with the Court. Typically the report would indicate that the
writer, a CSIS employee, had met with the source on a certain date and had been
given certain information. Notes of the interview, if any were made, were
typically not retained. The source is identified only by a code number and
word.
[155] A classified Source
Exhibit containing information about the human sources was filed with the Court
on September 5, 2008.
[156] Further to the delivery
to the Court of the information produced in response to the Charkaoui 2
disclosure order and the review of that information by the Court and the
Special Advocates, on April 3, 2009 the Court issued a confidential order
requiring the production of additional classified information respecting the
human sources. The Ministers responded to that order by filing two volumes of
documents on May 1, 2009. The Court required the production of further
information respecting the Service’s assessments of the credibility and
reliability of the human sources. A supplementary response was filed on May 15,
2009.
[157] On May 25th, 2009
counsel for the Ministers submitted a Revised and Amended Source Exhibit for
filing. This document contained revisions to the information filed on September
5, 2008. In respect of one human source, a polygraph examination had not been
performed as was previously reported. With regard to a second human source, the
circumstances surrounding a 2007 polygraph examination, not directly related to
this matter, were in question. As a result of this and similar questions which
had arisen in another certificate case, a review of the preparation of the
source exhibits was undertaken by CSIS and the Department of Justice.
[158] On June 3, 2009 the
Court issued a confidential direction requiring the production of additional
information relating to a number of questions concerning the human sources. Top
secret documents were filed by the Ministers in response to that direction on
June 17-18, 2009, including a document entitled a "Source Précis".
The Source Précis contained further extensive revisions to the information
provided by CSIS regarding the human sources. It was then clear that the second
human source was found to have been deceptive in providing answers during the
2007 polygraph examination. On June 22, 2009 a senior manager of the Service
was examined and cross examined concerning the process which CSIS had followed
in preparing the original and the revised source exhibits and the internal
review of these processes. These developments were communicated to Mr. Almrei
and his counsel on June 10 and June 26, 2009.
[159] The Court will deal with
the merits of the information provided by the human sources in the closed
judgment. However, in light of the disclosure of errors in the Source Exhibit
and the resulting motion brought by the respondent to quash the certificate as
an abuse of process, it is necessary to address the question of the reliability
of this information in these public reasons.
[160] The Court is sensitive
to the fact that human sources are an important component of the resources
available to security intelligence agencies in collecting information to
protect national security. CSIS is justifiably proud of its ability to recruit
and develop directed human sources. For a comparatively small intelligence
agency they have an established track record of success in recruiting
productive sources. This may give CSIS a relative advantage in the collection
and sharing of information between partner countries which have more extensive
technological capabilities or more numerous personnel. That success no doubt
serves Canada’s security interests
well.
[161] The precautions adopted
by CSIS to protect human sources include the close guarding of any information
that might possibly identify and expose the sources within the Service itself.
Such information is only available on a strict need to know basis to a limited
number of CSIS employees and is kept separate from the general reporting system
and databanks.
[162] In this case, the
reliability of the information provided by several human sources became a key
issue. If the information from the sources is to be believed, Mr. Almrei is
dedicated to the Bin Laden ideology and a threat to the security of Canada. It was crucial,
therefore, for the Court to determine whether the sources were credible. That
assessment depended in part on information held by CSIS in the source
management files; how they were recruited, developed and managed as directed
sources and the internal assessments of their reliability.
[163] Production of the Charkaoui
2 information also allowed for a comparison of the reports of information
provided by the human sources with other information held by CSIS including the
intercept and surveillance reports. That comparison identified some serious
contradictions. In the result, I was satisfied that the highly relevant
information provided by one source in particular was not credible as it
conflicted with surveillance and intercept reports made by CSIS personnel
regarding the same dates and times.
[164] It is of particular
concern that these contradictions did not come to light until they were put to
the Service witness in cross-examination by the Special Advocates. That witness
was unable to provide satisfactory explanations for the failure of the Service
to analyse the conflicting reports and to disclose this information to the
Ministers and to the Court. This suggests a serious lack of analytical capacity
in managing the enormous volume of information collected by the Service.
The Service Witnesses:
[165] The
Ministers called CSIS employees as representative witnesses in both the open
and closed proceedings. These were “representative” witnesses in the sense that
they gave evidence based on information collected by the Service relevant to
the proceedings and not from personal knowledge of the case. They also
testified about the Service view of the danger to Canadian national security
and the global risks posed by Sunni Islamic extremism. Neither of the three
witnesses called (including the witness on the detention review) were tendered
as experts to give opinion evidence. They testified as fact witnesses regarding
their knowledge of the threat environment and the information compiled by CSIS
relating to Mr. Almrei. I found them to be experienced, knowledgeable and
professional.
[166] In
the closed proceedings, the evidence of the Service witness dealt with the
classified information referenced in the SIR and A/SIR and supporting
documents. His identity was disclosed for the purposes of the record but I see
no need to reveal it here. I discuss his evidence in greater detail in the
closed reasons for judgment. For the public record, the witness testified with
regard to the accuracy of the classified information derived from human and
other sources. In particular, the witness testified as to the background of the
human sources, their relationship with and motivation for cooperating with the
Service, why their information was considered reliable and how it formed part
of the Service’s assessment of Mr. Almrei. The witness was cross-examined on
that evidence and on records obtained from the Service operational and human
source management databases.
[167] In the open proceedings,
the Ministers called Mr. Robert Young, a manager with the Service’s Toronto
Region office. Mr. Young has a BA in political science and an M.A. in
international relations. He has been an intelligence officer with the Service
since 1986, serving as an investigator and analyst and, since 1999, as a
manager. For the two years prior to his testimony he had been responsible for
managing investigations into Sunni Islamic extremism in the Toronto region. In the course
of his employment, he has traveled to Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka and he had lived in the Middle East for three years in the
late 90s dealing with Sunni extremism issues.
[168] Mr. Young had visited Afghanistan for operational reasons
for about a week. Ministers’ counsel objected to cross examination on the
purpose of that visit on national security grounds. The matter was not pressed
by the respondent and I did not consider this information to be relevant to
these proceedings. Mr. Young did not purport to be an expert on Afghanistan. He is familiar with
the background to the conflict there but not the details. He doesn’t speak any
of the local languages.
[169] While there was some
overlap with the testimony of the Service witness in the closed hearings, Mr.
Young did not refer to the classified information and he had not read it in
preparation for his testimony. His evidence reviewed the Service’s mandate with
regard to threats to the security of Canada under the CSIS Act. He then addressed the case
against Mr. Almrei as it appears in the public summaries of the security
intelligence reports. Much of his evidence was of a background nature,
outlining the Service understanding of Al Qaeda and the Bin Laden Network, the
role of the Afghan training camps in recruiting extremists, and Al Qaeda
operational methodologies such as the use of false documentation and
clandestine tradecraft.
[170] Mr. Young had not
directly participated in the Almrei investigation. CSIS has only
interviewed Almrei once just prior to his arrest in October 2001. They have not
attempted to since. Young had read the interview notes and the transcript of an
interview conducted by CIC that was entered into evidence. He indicated that
the Service is reluctant to interview anyone involved in litigation. Their goal
was to remove him from Canada and thought that they
had completed their work after the first security certificate was upheld.
[171] Based on all of the
available information, Mr. Young testified, the Service assessment is that
Almrei supports the extremist ideology espoused by Osama Bin Laden, that he has
connections to persons who share that ideology and that, through his
involvement in an international document forgery ring, the Service believes he
has the ability and capacity to facilitate the movement of extremists in Canada
and abroad who could commit terrorist acts. They consider that he has a
“pedigree” with the skill sets that would make him useful to a terrorist
organization.
[172] Almrei’s participation
in jihad on several different occasions is a concern to the Service, in
particular because he has never renounced jihad and took pride in his
willingness to participate in violence against others because of his religious
or ideological beliefs. Mr. Young said that the Service’s assessment was that
Almrei’s jihadist forays were not a one-off occasion such as might be expected
from a curious young man.
[173] The Service position is
that jihad is the same whether it is undertaken in one part of the world or
globally. The person who engages in jihad is, in the Service view, willing to
inflict violence and seeks to impose his will on the sovereignty of other
nations. Their concern with Almrei is that they believe he would be willing to
engage in jihad again when he believes it is justified to inflict violence in a
political situation.
[174] Mr.
Young noted that Almrei came to Canada from Jordan on a
false U.A.E. passport which he claimed to have destroyed upon arrival. A search
by immigration officials of Almrei’s apartment later revealed the false U.A.E.
passport. In the Service’s view this is consistent with a person who is
sympathetic to the jihadi cause, in that the travel document could be re-used
by associates or others involved in jihadism.
[175] On
cross-examination Mr. Young conceded that many people cross borders using false
documentation who have no relationship with extremist groups. He agreed that
this factor wouldn’t be alarming on its own. However, combined with all the
other issues and facts known from the open information, it contributes to a
greater concern for the Service.
[176] Almrei’s
connection to the Muslim Brotherhood was also a basis for concern because of
that group’s links to terrorism in the past. While the Service has no
information linking Almrei to membership in the organization, his claim for
refugee status was based on persecution due to the political beliefs of his
father who had been a prominent member. He also claimed that his Syrian
passport was provided to him by the Muslim Brotherhood. That, in itself, did
not carry much significance Mr. Young said, on cross-examination. He also
agreed that inaccurate information was provided to the Service by CIC regarding
Almrei’s refugee claim. He had never claimed, as reported by CIC, that his
father had been killed and his mother imprisoned by Syria.
[177] Mr.
Young suggested that Almrei was in a position to use his honey and perfume
business as a cover to travel to countries to participate in jihad or to
further the cause of Islamist extremism.While there is no evidence that Almrei
did in fact use this trade to conceal weapons or to raise funds for extremist
activities, that type of business has been used by extremists for such purposes
in the past.
[178] On
cross-examination, Mr. Young acknowledged that the Court had found in a 2005
detention review hearing that the role of the honey business was speculative.
He agreed that there is no new evidence to support an adverse inference from
this activity. Counsel for the Ministers indicated that they would not ask me
to take a position different from that reached by my colleague in 2005.
[179] In
the October 2001 interview, Almrei denied having been to a number of countries,
which later turned out by his own admission to be untruthful, notably Afghanistan and Tajikistan. In
Mr. Young’s mind that raised the question: after having been recognized as a
refugee claimant and having secured a certain status in Canada, why
would he continue to lie? Almrei has also admitted that he withheld
information from the Service and from the lawyer. He has thus demonstrated a
pattern of being untruthful, which has made it difficult for the Service to
actually discern what Almrei has done in the past and to what degree.
[180] Almrei’s
participation in the training camps goes beyond just a philosophical adherence
to an ideology, according to Mr. Young. It shows a real commitment to follow
through on that violent ideology, to take the time, put one’s life at risk, to
follow up on that cause, be willing to kill people because of a belief in
jihad.
[181] Regarding Almrei’s
travels to Tajikistan, Mr. Young said he
could only speculate about the reasons. He thinks it unlikely that all Almrei
was doing there was participating in scouting missions. In his view, the
purpose, in military terms, was to conduct pre-operational reconnaissance in
advance of an attack to kill people. Supporting the jihad in Chechnya is also of concern. As
is Almrei’s visits to Sayyaf’s and Khattab’s guesthouses and camps. Guest
houses were the initial reception areas for would-be mujahidin. They would
receive basic ideological indoctrination. Passports and other identification
were retained there. Thereafter, they would only use a kunya or nom de guerre.
[182] On
cross-examination, the witness agreed that many of the men who went to
Afghanistan in the late eighties were financed and encouraged by the Saudi
government and the US. Their motivation was essentially to push the Russian infidel
invaders out of a Muslim country and rejection of the Marxist, atheistic
communist government in Kabul. For the Americans, Afghanistan was
a cold war surrogate in the effort to weaken the Soviet Union. The fact that a
person went to Afghanistan during the Soviet presence
or the communist government doesn’t mean they are associated with Bin Laden,
but it would be of concern to the Service.
[183] Mr.
Young considered that there was not much difference between offensive and
defensive jihad as the latter may involve offensive action. He agrees that most
of those who went to Afghanistan in the 1980s and early 1990s
would have gone home afterwards to get on with their lives. The US
decision to support the jihad as a surrogate war against the Soviets was ill-conceived
in his view. In any event, there is nothing to compare that action with the
present day role of the coalition forces in Afghanistan
supporting the Karzai government.
[184] The
witness testified that the Service view of Khattab is that he was a committed
jihadist. This was derived from numerous sources. While it may be premature for
history to come to any conclusions about his activities, he acknowledged,
Khattab knew Bin Laden and may have received funding from Al Qaeda. Khattab was
allied with Basayev, the Chechen insurgent leader believed to have committed
terrorist acts and worked to establish a Muslim Caliphate in the region. His
reputation in the early 1990’s was that of a fierce and fearless fighter and
brilliant commander. Young believes that Khattab’s major contribution to what
had begun as a sectarian conflict in Chechnya was
to Islamicize the fight.
[185] Young
didn’t dispute that the Service has expressed a more benign view of Khattab in
other proceedings. In Exhibit A-16, Appendix D to the 2008 Harkat summary, the
following appears at paragraph 4:
“…contrary to Bin Laden, Ibn Khattab
has never been quoted as calling for a struggle between Islam and the West,
and has never called for Jihad against America or Jews. His struggle was
against Russia and its occupation of the Caucasus.”
[186] But
in an Associated Press story out of Moscow
dated September 14, 1999, Khattab was quoted as speaking approvingly of
terrorist attacks against Russian civilians (A-15) and in another article,
against American military forces in Saudi Arabia: “… Muslims have the
right to seek such a solution.” (Ex. A-1, V.1, T-4, p.2). Mr. Young
acknowledged that there were conflicting accounts about Khattab’s statements
and that some of this might be attributable to Russian propaganda.
[187] In cross-examination,
Mr. Young said he hadn’t seen much to substantiate the claim in paragraph 63 of
the summary regarding Khattab other than the claims of the author of “Chechen
Jihad”. He acknowledged that the author, Josef Bodansky, has been criticized for
relying on Russian sources and for failing to identify his sources. FBI
headquarters did not believe that Khattab was closely connected to Bin Laden or
was hostile to the US (T-137 p.10). The fight
in Chechnya was largely
nationalistic and not ideological. Young is not aware of
any contrary information to that given by Almrei in his statutory declaration
regarding his contacts with Khattab between 1994 and 1997.
[188] Almrei’s association
with Nabil Almarabh was also a concern to the Service. Almrei had met him at a
camp in Kunduz in 1994. In Ontario in 2001, he contributed funds for Almarabh’s release on
bail and acquired a false passport for him. Almarabh was taken into custody in
the US after 9/11 on a
material witness warrant as a suspected terrorist. He was released in 2004 and
deported to Syria after being cleared of
all terrorist allegations (Ex. A-1, T-98). Testimony before a US Congressional committee
in August 2006 (Ex. A-1, T-99) claimed that he was linked to terrorist
suspects.
[189] Mr. Young conceded that
it is reasonable to assume that a number of contacts would have dried up while
Almrei was in detention for seven years. He thinks it is equally reasonable to
assume that others are still in business. A concern regarding Mr. Almrei is
that he would continue along the path that he has chosen thus far in life, to
connect with people involved in fraudulent documentation to assist the cause.
[190] Mr. Young had reviewed
all of the open documentary record. The CSIS process in preparing the SIR is
that after preparation by the Security Screening Branch, it goes up through
several levels of review, including legal advice. The case is brought forward
to the Director for approval and ultimately to the two Ministers for signature.
The public summary and supporting reference documents are also prepared by the
security screening branch. Great care is taken to ensure accuracy. The Service
seeks to file reliable and balanced material as it goes to the credibility of
the Service. The author’s history or pedigree, sources, footnotes, etc., may be
important. The Service doesn’t differentiate between open and closed sources
and seeks to corroborate the facts.
[191] On
cross-examination, Mr. Young was taken to a reference at paragraph 30 in the
public summary (fn 62, T-122, Edmonton Journal article) to a confession
disclosed in US military commission proceedings by a person described as a
veteran Al Qaeda operative; Waleed bin Attash. Exhibit R-11, Report of the
International Committee of the Red Cross to the CIA dated February 14, 2007
discusses bin Attash’s treatment following his arrest in Karachi in
April 2003. This is corroborated by Exhibit R-12, the August 1, 2002 US
Department of Justice memorandum authorizing the CIA to use “enhanced
interrogation techniques”.
[192] Mr.
Young agreed that it was a mistake for the Service to include the reference to
the confession as it was likely obtained through abusive treatment falling
within the scope of the exclusion in IRPA ss. 83(1.1). CSIS does not rely on
information obtained by torture, according to Mr. Young and public statements
by the Director and Minister. He noted that information obtained five
years ago from Guantanamo may have been treated as reliable at
that time. Now it would have to be reconsidered given more recent disclosures
about the manner in which it may have been obtained. As noted above, the
Ministers have withdrawn this information.
[193] On
cross-examination, Mr. Young was taken to several other documents in the
reference indices that relied upon information that may have been obtained
under “enhanced interrogation techniques”: e.g., T-52, T-123, T-128. He agreed
that the information would be tainted if it had been obtained under duress.
[194] The
witness was also taken to a selection of documents relied upon as references in
the amended summary which contained information that was later proven to be
inaccurate. For example, a news report in T-105 regarding an allegedly bungled
Al Qaeda arms experiment involving the poison ricin (Ex. R-16, R-17). Mr Young
agreed that the report in T-105 should not have been used by CSIS without
checking the facts.
[195] Paragraph
31 of the summary references an AP report reprinted in a Jane’s publication
that Columbian authorities had linked a forgery ring to Al Qaeda. CSIS relied
on it as the source for a statement about false document usage. Other, more
authoritative sources cast doubt on the story (Ex. R-19 and R-20). On
re-direct, the witness said the Jane’s report is accurate.
[196] In my
view, the Jane’s report is accurate only in the sense that it accurately
reports a statement by the Columbian Attorney-General. That statement was
without a factual foundation as the respondent’s exhibits effectively
demonstrated.
[197] The
witness was taken to a statement in paragraph 14 of the amended summary that
relied on a TimesONLINE report dated February 4, 2009 (fn 22 referencing T-109)
for the claim that terror suspects under house arrest in the UK have maintained
contact with terrorists and remain determined to mount terror attacks in the
future. The
TimesONLINE report took a few words out of context from the Fourth Report by
the Independent Reviewer on United Kingdom Terrorism Legislation
(Lord Carlisle) at para. 58, p. 20 (Ex. R-21). The actual
text states:
My view is that it is
only in a few cases that control orders can be justified for more than two
years… there are a few controlees who, despite the restrictions place upon
them, manage to maintain some contact with terrorist associates and/or groups,
and a determination to become operational in the future.
[198] This
was turned into a headline that “Terror Suspects Plot Attacks While Under House
Arrest” which was relied upon by the Service analyst who wrote the paragraph
and who evidently did not check the actual source.
[199] Mr.
Young was taken to a number of other reference sources relied upon by the
Service including excerpts from Wikipedia and other sources of unknown
reliability. He agreed that there were problems in the use of such sources.
Some are solely published on-line and provide no information about who is behind
them or where they get their information. Other reports were stale by the time
they were relied upon. That is, the information they contained was shown to be
inaccurate, incomplete or misleading in later reports. For example, a CSIS
threat assessment written in January 2005 contained inaccurate information
about an April 2004 arrest (T-72, T-73, Ex. R-24)). This raises the question as
to why the Service continued to rely on the earlier reports.
[200] The
witness agreed that the wording in paragraph 57 of the public summary left the
impression that Abdul Rasul Sayyaf had a continuing relationship with Bin Laden
whereas the sources placed their contacts to the period during the anti-Soviet
jihad (see for example Ex. R-25). While the sources are clear that Sayyaf was a
hard-line Islamist, Mr. Young agreed that after Bin Laden’s return in 1996,
Sayyaf supported the Northern Alliance which was fighting Bin Laden’s Taliban
allies. The evidence doesn’t support a continuation of the relationship after
the anti-Soviet jihad. But in documents the witness was taken to on re-direct
examination to clarify his evidence, it is clear that Sayyaf was also a deeply
conservative Islamist with views just as extreme as those of the Taliban.
[201] Mr. Young gave his
evidence in a clear, concise and professional manner. He conceded weaknesses
in the material relied upon by the Service when the deficiencies were apparent
on the face of the documents or there was conflicting information on the
record. He also held firmly to the Service position that Almrei is a risk to
national security. But his repeated references to the fact that Almrei had lied
or withheld information made me wonder whether the Service gave this factor
more weight than it deserved in their assessment of the threat posed by Almrei.
It is an unfortunate reality that many people lie in their encounters with the
authorities over immigration matters. Particularly those who come from regions
of the world where telling the truth to the authorities may not be advisable.
Hassan Almrei
[202] The respondent testified
on his own behalf and asked that the Court take into consideration that his
memory of details may be faulty after more than seven years of detention. He
said that he had deliberately avoided reviewing the records of his previous
hearings so as to tell his story to the Court as he recalls it now. He testified on his own
behalf, in English and without the aid of an interpreter. He has learned
English while in detention, mainly from the prison guards, television and
reading.
[203] In the respondent’s
view, this was the first time that he has been able to give his complete story
to the Court. He says that during the first security certificate proceedings in
2001, he refused to testify because he feared for the safety of his family and
friends if he gave evidence in public. In his view, his opportunity to provide
evidence during subsequent hearings was limited as the finding that he was a
security risk had already been made and the question at those hearings was
whether he should continue to be detained pending the outcome of removal
proceedings. Almrei believes the process remains unfair, notwithstanding the
involvement of the Special Advocates, as he does not see the closed
information.
[204] Almrei
testified that he was born on January 1, 1974, in Syria, the
fourth child of eleven. The family moved to Dammam,
Saudi Arabia in 1981 because of a fear of persecution in Syria.
Most of his family continue to live in Saudi Arabia. He
has a sister in Lebanon and one sister and brother in England. He
is the only sibling not to have attended university. His father taught Islamic
studies in elementary school and taught at a mosque in the evenings which is
where Almrei began to memorize the Koran from the age of five.
[205] Almrei
is a hafiz, that is one who knows the Koran by heart. He also learned to
recite it. Recital of the Koran is an art form in Islam. There are
competitions for those who can do it well. Almrei says that he learned how to
do this by buying tapes and emulating others. He also led others in prayer as
an Imam. This is not the same as being a member of the clergy in the West, but
simply refers to someone who has memorized the Koran and is able to recite it
to lead others in prayer. Almrei does not consider himself to be an Islamic scholar
but has read a great deal, particularly over the past eight years. He discussed
his understanding of the basic tenets of the faith and the different schools of
Islamic law.
[206] As a
young boy, Almrei testified, he told his family that he wanted to be known as
Abu Hareth, because one of the Hadith of the Prophet refers to the name
Hareth as particularly blessed. Almrei wished to give his son, when he had one,
that name. Abu means father. The practice of adopting a kunya, or
honorific and familiar name by which a male is known to family and close
friends is common in the Middle East. It is often but not necessarily based on
the first born son’s name. Abu Hareth became Almrei’s kunya from a young
age. He says he did not adopt it as a nom de guerre, as the Ministers
suggest, and did not attempt to conceal it from the authorities when he
completed his refugee claim and was interviewed. He did not consider it a name
that he should provide.
[207] Almrei’s
father was a member of the Syrian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood (MB). His
uncle and his uncle’s son had been jailed for their membership which was
illegal in Syria at the time. His father had been
sentenced to death in absentia. His mother was detained and interrogated
on a later trip. Two of his uncles still live in Syria.
[208] The
MB is a transnational Sunni Muslim movement founded in Egypt in
1928. The political arm of the movement is legal in Egypt and
serves as an opposition party. The MB was tolerated in other Middle Eastern
countries such as Jordan. In Syria, it
was proscribed as it had been involved in repeated efforts to overthrow the
government.
[209] An
insurrection in 1981-82 was brutally suppressed by the ruling Baath party and
membership was made a capital offence. Almrei testified that in 1982 as an
eight-year-old boy attending mosque in Saudi Arabia he
learned of the massacre in Hama, Syria in
which thousands of Sunnis were killed by the Alewite controlled Syrian army.
[210] He
says that it was the memory of this event, in part, that later led him to
declare to his father that he wished to join a jihad against those who would
slaughter innocent Muslims. As a teenager he learned about the jihad in Afghanistan in
the Mosque and through reading a Pakistani magazine. Among his siblings, he was
the only one so motivated. The family initially treated it as a joke. At 16 he
decided to go and sought his parents’ permission. His father’s conditions were
that he complete high school and finish memorizing the Koran. As it turned out,
he testified, he had completed the latter but not the former when he first went
to Afghanistan in 1990 during the summer
recess from high school. Almrei was then 16 years old.
[211] Almrei
described his understanding of jihad as an inner struggle. He regarded the
jihad in Afghanistan to be a legitimate struggle
against the Russian invasion. The killing of innocents is contrary to the
Koran. The Koran says fight in the name of Allah, those who fight you; do not
be the aggressor; do what you need to do but no more. Bin Laden and others do
not read the entire Koran. They use some verses from the Koran and the hadith
but not the whole thing. The Muslim ummah agreed that what was going on in Afghanistan was
a legitimate jihad. Bin Laden and others will go anywhere to kill others. That
is not jihad. There are conditions and limits to what is permitted in jihad
even where a Muslim land becomes occupied.
[212] Regarding
9/11, Almrei is not sure whether it was a political or a religious act. In
religious terms it was against Islam first because the hijackers killed
themselves. In Islam they are murderers. This was fitna or a bad thing.
Many people died. In political terms it made no sense also as it could not help
the Palestinian people or other Muslims. He describes himself as anti-American
policy, but not anti-American. He had no objection to the presence of the
American troops in Saudi Arabia and thought it was good for
business. That could not be the occasion for jihad as they had come with the
permission of the legitimate government with the approval of the ulemma or
community of scholars.
[213] In
1990, he went to Afghanistan during his summer break from
high school to fight the Russians and the communist regime they had left in
place. He did not differentiate between the two. He flew from Damman to Islamabad,
Pakistan and from there went by bus to Peshawar, the
usual “staging area” for Arab jihadis entering Afghanistan. A
government office in Riyadh had provided advice and a 75% discount
on the price of an air ticket. He traveled on a Syrian passport which was valid
for two years renewable every six months. His father sent it to the MB to get
an extra stamp to allow him to travel to Afghanistan. He
had not done the obligatory military service in Syria and
they would not let him travel outside the region. The MB stamps looked like
valid Syrian stamps. He did not himself join the MB.
[214] The
bus took him to Beit al Ansar (House of Supporters) in Peshawar
along with twenty or so others. This was big house in a nice neighbourhood with
lots of rooms. They slept four or five to a room and also ate there. At Beit
al Ansar, people ate, chatted, slept, hung around together. They could go
out to restaurants or to the Mosque. People who had been to Afghanistan
would come back for a rest. They did not talk about their personal lives. You
would be regarded as an informer if you asked. There were many other houses in Peshawar for
people of different nationalities. They didn’t pay. He stayed 27 days and
became infected with malaria. His father told him to come back.
[215] Almrei
returned home for treatment. He missed the first semester of school that year
and asked his dad when he recovered if he could go back. He returned to Pakistan in
1991 with a flight again subsidized by the government. This time he met an
older man on the plane, Sala’ud’din, told him where he was going and that he
had memorized the Koran. Sala’ud’din suggested that he go to an Afghan camp
rather than one run by the Arabs. He went with him in a taxi to Pabbi (or
Babhi), a village near Peshawar controlled by Abdul Rasul Sayyaf.
[216] Almrei
knew of Sayyaf from the magazines he had read in Saudi Arabia. The
Pakistan government had given each of the seven mujahidin groups in Afghanistan land
for their refugees. Pabbi was Sayyaf’s camp. It was well established with
schools, etc. He stayed at one of Sayyaf’s guest-houses because he was with
Sala’ud’din. He met Sayyaf there. Almrei stayed for a few weeks waiting for a
supply truck from Jalalabad and went back in the truck to a camp in Afghanistan. He
testified that it is not what you might expect from the term “camp”. It was no
more than a mud house farm with a corner to pray in and a village near by.
[217] This
was the Shahid Bilal camp near Jalalabad. The person in charge, Samir al Haq,
showed him how to use an AK-47. This took about an hour to learn how to clean
it, shoot it, etc., and then he was given one to use himself. He practised
shooting at targets. While there were several other types of weapons there he
did not train in their use. There were no other forms of training. He was there
as a guest and could leave at any time. No one had a uniform; everyone wore the
same clothes; there were no officers.
[218] The
others at the camp were Afghan mujahidin belonging to Sayyaf’s group.
Sala’ud’din left after a few days, but Almrei stayed on for two months. He says
that he spent his time largely teaching Arabic and leading prayers. When
supplies were delivered to other camps in the area, he would often go along for
the ride. Almrei says that in staying at the camp, he was practising rebat,
or garrison duty; a form of jihad. He could hear occasional skirmishes but he
himself did not see or take part in any fighting. He never saw Sayyaf there.
[219] Almrei
describes himself as a naïve 17 year old at that time. He thought that he would
go do jihad, get killed and go to paradise. Sala’ud’din had educated him about
the reality of jihad in Afghanistan. Sala’ud’din advised him to
avoid the problems at the Arab camps. He said that if you have 10 Arabs in one
place, you have 11 emirs. Almrei says that he had heard of Bin Laden in Saudi
Arabia but never met him. He did not know or understand his
politics.
[220] He
went home after the two months at the camp to finish high school. This took
another year. At summer vacation in 1992 he returned to the Sayyaf guest house
in Pabbi and the Shahid Bilal camp near Jalalabad. This trip took two months
because that was the length of his summer vacation. He also visited Karachi on
that occasion. Samir ul Haq was still in charge and gave him another AK-47. He
met Sayyaf on that trip at the mosque in Pabbi, just to say hello. Sayyaf had
no interest in a 17 year old. They never had a one to one meeting. In Peshawar and
other locations he would get a room and just wander around.
[221] Following
graduation from high school, he worked for three months at a Saudi charity that
built schools, hospitals and orphanages in Africa. He
also ran a business selling incense, honey and perfume.
[222] In
1994, he started hearing about the Russian occupation in Tajikistan in the
Mosque in Saudi Arabia. Tajiks were becoming
refugees in Afghanistan. He decided to go and see
for himself. Asked for his father’s permission again. There was no discount
this time from the Saudi government. He returned to Pabbi, inquired about Tajikistan and
was told about Ibn Khattab. He went to Khattab’s guest house nearby and met
Khattab later after evening prayers. They both spoke with a Saudi accent and
Khattab was only three years older than him at that time. Khattab was also from
Damman and still had family there whom Almrei later got to know. Khattab’s
family was Bedouin from Aram in Northern Saudi Arabia and his father worked for the oil
company Aramco.
[223] Almrei
travelled on to Khattab’s houses in Paghman, near Kabul, and
Kunduz in the north where the Tajik leader Ahmed Massoud was based. Fighting
was underway at that time (late 1994) between Massoud’s and Dostum’s forces and
those of the Pashtun leader Hekamatyar. Massoud and Dostum were loyal to the
Prime Minister Rabbani. The Afghans had been fighting each other since the fall
of the Najibullah government in 1992. Almrei says that Khattab had decided to
go to Tajikistan as that was still a jihad against an
external oppressor. They were ashamed of what was going on in Afghanistan with
Muslims fighting Muslims.
[224] Almrei
says he met Nabil Almarabh for the first time at the Kunduz house. Almarabh was
passing through and stayed for just a few days.
[225] The
Tajik refugee camp at Kunduz was led by Abdullah al Noury, a leader of the
Tajik United Opposition party. There were many charitable organizations working
to improve conditions and Khattab had offered to help. Almrei says that he
became aware that they had a need for a girl’s school. He says the Tajiks were
more open to education for women.
[226] Almrei
walked back to Jalalabad and went home to Saudi Arabia.
While in Ryadh to buy oud for his business, he approached the Al Haramain
Foundation and asked them for funding for a school for girls in Kunduz. He gave
the name of a scholar from his home city as a reference. They gave him a
cheque for 120,000 Rials (about $33,000 Cdn at the present exchange rate) which
he cashed in to travel with. He returned to Pakistan in
late 1995 and travelled from Pabbi to Kunduz with a guide and two Arabs mainly
on foot and turned the money over to the men in charge of the camp.
[227] On
this trip he accompanied Khattab on a scouting mission. He says that about
twenty men went to the Amu Darya River bordering Tajikistan to
see if there was anywhere they could cross without encountering a Russian
ambush. They walked and rode donkeys rented from villagers. Almrei says he
believed that Massoud and Rabbani had encouraged Khattab to enter into
discussions or negotiations in Tajikistan but that they did not
cross over on this occasion and returned to Kunduz. On a subsequent trip, he
says they crossed over into Tajikistan on an inflatable boat
and set up a camp on the north side of the river. It was not a military camp in
any sense and there was no fighting while they were there. On a typical day
they would fish with grenades or hunted rabbits with their AK-47’s. This was
apparently a common practice in the region. He considered this period to be
again, rebat or a form of garrison duty. He says they remained there two
weeks and then he had to leave to return to Saudi Arabia to
maintain his status there. The people he travelled with went on to Chechnya.
[228] While
in the camp, Almrei says he talked about a variety of things with Khattab and
came to know him well. He describes Khattab as devout and considerate to others
and regards him to be a hero for his actions in Afghanistan and Chechnya.
Almrei says he wasn’t interested in following Khattab to Chechnya; it
“wasn’t in his blood”. He does believe in jihad but his experiences had been
enough for him. He wanted to get on with his life.
[229] Almrei
acknowledged that the Khattab he knew could have changed in Chechnya but
he doesn’t believe it. He suspects the Russians set the bombs that they blamed
on the insurgents to justify invading Chechnya. But
if it were true that Khattab was involved, Almrei would no longer have any
respect for the man as that is not jihad but a crime. Going to Chechnya to
participate in a legitimate defensive jihad was supported by the Muslim ummah
in Saudi Arabia.
[230] Before
coming to Canada, Almrei says he ran a honey, incense and
oud perfume business which he had started in high school. It was illegal for a
non-Saudi citizen so he rented space in an established business and used a
Saudi front man by the name of Mohamed al Blooshi. During his trips to Pakistan, he
had realized how cheap the products were there. His last trip to Afghanistan was
in 1996. He took some additional cash for the school’s expenses and returned
with substantial quantities of honey and perfume for his business.
[231] Almrei
says that the Saudi’s began to crack down on businesses fronted by Saudis and
his associate al Blooshi was being questioned. They were also aware of his
travels to Pakistan and Afghanistan and that he had spoken
out about political matters in Saudi Arabia. He
sold the business in 1997 and began looking to move elsewhere. He applied for a
Canadian visa in 1998 and was refused. He considered going to Australia also
but was dissuaded when he learned that they put refugee claimants in a
detention camp.
[232] In
his 1998 application, Almrei said he would be visiting Hisham al Taha in Richmond,
B.C. He didn’t know him but had asked Abu al Walid in Pakistan for
help and had been given two names and phone numbers in Canada. One
was for Ahmed al Kaysee in Toronto who didn’t answer when
he called. Al Taha agreed when he was called. They were both Iraqi. Al Taha
later did not recall having spoken to him when he was asked to assist in
Almrei’s legal proceedings. Almrei said that this type of arrangement was
common in his part of the world. He appreciates now, after seven and a half
years in prison, that it is not common here.
[233] When
that attempt failed, Almrei went to Jordan and
bought a UAE passport and Kuwaiti driver’s license in the name of Yousuf Bilal
(Exhibit R-28). This was a valid passport stolen or sold by the original holder
and it came with a few entry stamps. In November-December 1998, he went to Bahrain to
obtain a few additional documents to make the passport more credible. His
friend al Blooshi obtained a multiple visit Canadian visa for him from the
embassy at Abu Dhabi. When he called on the second occasion
in January 1999, Al Kaysee agreed to meet him at the Toronto
airport. Al Kaysee was then an Imam at a Toronto Mosque.
[234] Almrei
described some dealings with his Syrian/MB passport with the Jordanian
authorities. He says that they confiscated the one that he had after he had
travelled to Thailand in August 1998 and later it was returned
to him by the MB. His Aunt worked in the MB office in Amman and
arranged to have it stamped with a Syrian exit stamp. The passport he had used
in his tourist visa application to Canada earlier that year was confiscated
upon his return from a trip to Turkey. On that occasion he
was questioned by Jordanian intelligence about his travels and was later asked
by the MB to provide them with a report on the interview.
[235] Almrei
used the UAE passport to come to Canada via
the UK. That document has a Thai visa dated December 2, 1998
valid for a month. Almrei said initially that it was not his and came with the
passport when he bought it. On cross-examination, he said it had to have been
the one he obtained. He says he tested the passport by getting a visa from the
Thai embassy but did not use it, hence the absence of entry and exit stamps.
[236] He
went to Thailand in August 1998 because of its reputation
for human smuggling. He went there to see if he could find a way to get to Canada, as
well as for a holiday. In Bangkok he went to a night club
and approached two men speaking Arabic. One of them was a Palestinian named
Ghaleb. He met him the next day to discuss the matter at a hotel on Sukhimveit
Road. Ghaleb told him he could arrange to smuggle him to Canada for
about $10,000. Almrei didn’t use his services as he did not trust him. But
after he came to Canada, he stayed in touch with Ghaleb about bringing people
from Jordan to Canada. He
says they spoke about three times at the instigation of his interpreter in Toronto who
had asked for this assistance. All of this, he says, he told the RCMP after his
arrest.
[237] Almrei
completed a refugee application in January 1999 with Hassan Ahmed’s assistance.
It contained errors including incorrect dates. He says he was confused by the
western calendar. That application was misplaced by CIC. The second application
dated April 11, 1999 was prepared by his lawyer and contains information about
his Syrian/MB passport. He did not disclose his travel to Pakistan, Afghanistan or Tajikistan, on
the advice of his interpreter, he says. At the refugee hearing he did not
mention Afghanistan but said he had travelled Pakistan to
buy honey. He said he had destroyed the UAE passport which was not true.
[238] The
UAE passport was seized during a search of his apartment in 2000. CIC officers
were looking for one of his room mates, Yahya, who was not there. He could not
speak English at the time. They asked him to produce ID and then to sit while
they searched the premises. They opened his briefcase and found documents
including the passport which they seized leaving a receipt. Almrei offered to
bring the room mate to the CIC office when he returned, which he did the next
day.
[239] Almrei
says that he was called by the interpreter, Agha in 2001 and asked for
assistance in getting a passport for Almarabh so he could leave the country to
visit his mother in Kuwait. Almrei had previously learned of a
contact in Montreal, Mohamed, who could provide false
passports. The interpreter called him on several occasions trying to get him to
obtain such documents but never followed through with the money. Almrei’s
theory is that the interpreter is a government informant who was trying to set
him up.
[240] Almrei’s
business in Toronto was two or three blocks away from the
copy shop operated by Almarabh’s uncle. He had seen Nabil at the shop but had
not recognized him. When they spoke and he introduced himself as Abu Adnan, his
kunya, Almrei recognized him as someone he had met in Kunduz in 1994. They both
looked different. They had long beards and were skinny then. Both were
beardless and considerably larger.
[241] Almrei
agreed to arrange for a false passport. He called Mohamed, rented a car, took
Nabil’s money and drove to Montreal where he met Mohammed
on St. Catherine St. He gave half of the money
then with the photo. Mohamed’s accent was Algerian. They met the next day to
transfer the passport with the new photo, citizenship, driver’s license and SIN
card. He paid $2000 and kept the balance of $2000 for himself.
[242] Almarabh
was detained after a failed attempt to be smuggled across the border at Niagara
Falls on June 27, 2001. He had not attempted to use the false
passport. He was charged under the Immigration Act and released on a
$19,000 bond put up by his uncle Ahmad Shehab with a contribution from Almrei.
He was then smuggled into the US on July 7, 2001.
[243] Almrei
admits that he also participated in a scheme with Ibrahim Ishak to obtain valid
Ontario driver’s licenses for people who could not otherwise
legally obtain them. An Ontario GI permit would be taken to Michigan and
exchanged for a Michigan license. They would then use those to
obtain Ontario licenses with full driving privileges.
They charged $500 for this service.
[244] Almrei
and his friend bought the Eat-a-Pita restaurant in the Yorkville area but lost
money and sold the business after about nine months. He hired Zenab Awaymer as
a cook. She had no status in Canada and paid him $4000 to
arrange a marriage of convenience with Ishak. Ishak later withdrew his
sponsorship after becoming engaged to a Bosnian woman. Almrei says he repaid
the money. Awaymer returned to Lebanon. Almrei claims that he
has no knowledge of the documents that Ishak was carrying when he was stopped
and searched at the Detroit airport in February 2000.
[245] Following
9/11, he says he became aware of the surveillance on him and became alarmed. He
learned through news reports that the FBI was looking for Nabil Almarabh and
knew that he would be connected through the false passport. His lawyer arranged
for a meeting with CSIS. Almrei says that he was frightened. He comes from a
region where he had heard terrible things about the intelligence authorities.
In the result, he denied everything.
[246] Following
his arrest, the RCMP interviewed him in jail about the passport he obtained for
Almarabh and he agreed to talk to them on the understanding that it would not
be used against him. No lawyer was present. He says they talked for about eight
hours.
[247] Almrei
denies having been involved in an international forged document ring. He says
that the only ones he was involved with were those he had described in his
testimony. He says he never got anything from Ghaleb in Thailand; nothing more
from the people in Jordan from whom he bought the UAE passport and
that he had nothing to do with Ishak’s package of documents. He acknowledges
that there was reason to be suspicious about what he was doing with passports
but he never expected to be thrown in jail for it. He says that it was worth it
in a sense as it gave him the opportunity to meet many people who have touched
his life.
[248] On
cross-examination, Almrei explained that he had not disclosed his kunya, Abu al
Hareth, to the immigration authorities as he does not consider it his name and
does not use it in introductions. He was not asked by CSIS in October 2001 if
he had a kunya. He did not withhold this information so that CSIS would have
difficulty connecting him with his history. Most people in the community in Toronto had
only known him as Abu al Hareth.
[249] Almrei
was questioned closely on the passports he has held. Almrei says he had
obtained three Syrian/MB passports. The one he received in 1990 required a
Saudi stamp permitting exits for up to six months which could be renewed. He
says that he lost that one after the first renewal and obtained a new one from
the MB. That first passport is not in evidence. The second which he obtained in
1991, was taken by the Jordanians when he returned from Turkey in
1998 and he was given another by the MB. The third, which is in evidence, was
issued in 1998 and was valid until May 2004. In the result, the passport which
would document his travels from 1991 to 1998 is not in evidence.
[250] Almrei
said he was confused by the number of passports he was issued by the MB and may
have had another one. He identified a Saudi driver’s license filed in the IRB
proceedings (A-24) which refers to a Syrian ID issued in 1995. He agrees that
is probably a Syrian passport but has no idea where it is. His explanation is
that in travelling across the bridge from Damman to Bahrain for
shopping or dinner required an entry and exit visa stamp. Passports would be
filled up rapidly and replaced. The MB in Jordan was
allowed by that government to print Syrian passports and those passports were
accepted in Saudi Arabia.
[251] Regarding
the UAE passport, Almrei says that he lied about destroying it in the IRB
proceedings as he feared he would not be accepted as a refugee. If that
happened he wanted to be able to use the passport again. When he was accepted,
he forgot about it until it was found in his apartment. In his 2004 testimony
before the Court, Almrei said he bought the passport with the Canadian visa
already in it. He did not mention Al Blooshi’s role in obtaining it.
[252] Almrei
acknowledged having had a Yemeni passport in the mid-90s. He had attempted to
buy Yemeni citizenship in Saudi Arabia but
destroyed the passport upon receipt as it came with someone else’s name and
date of birth. At that stage he wanted citizenship anywhere and believed it
could be bought in Yemen.
[253] Saudi
intelligence had spoken to al Blooshi about his political opinions. Saudi
Arabia was interested in people who had been to Afghanistan in
the aftermath of the 1996 bombings in Khobar. They jailed thousands of Shiites
from the eastern provinces suspected of cooperation with Hezbollah. They were
also inquiring about people who had openly expressed opinions about the Royal Family.
But he had to leave Saudi Arabia not for that but because of
the Saudi law prohibiting non-Saudi’s from owning businesses. He was no longer
in school and was not employed. He did not want to have to join the MB which
was the only other option.
[254] Almrei
was taken back over his testimony about his travels in Afghanistan in
detail on cross-examination. For the most part, his account held together in my
view. He was uncertain on some dates and time-lines but that is not in itself
surprising. On reflection, he said he thought his last trip to Pakistan was
in 1995 and not 1996. He was there when the Egyptian Embassy was bombed in Islamabad,
which was in November 1995. During his first trip to Kunduz, it was cold and
snowy so that could have been early rather than late 1994. He didn’t care about
the dates then and did not keep a diary. Now he is relying upon his high school
transcript to determine the years. He thinks that he did two trips to Tajikistan in
1994 and a third in 1995.
[255] Counsel
for the Ministers questioned him closely on the reasons why he was allowed to
stay at what he had characterized as Sayyaf’s “VIP” guest house in Pabbi. He
explained that it was because of Sala’ud’din and that it was nothing more than
a small house made of brick and mud, painted white. He recalls playing
ping-pong with Sayyaf after a dinner but apart from that had little contact
with him. When pressed about news articles citing crimes committed by Sayyaf’s
men, he said he accepts that they may have done this but he never saw it and
does not believe that Sayyaf would have allowed it. Almrei wondered why he was
being asked to answer for Sayyaf’s actions. He has no respect for the mujahidin
leaders who killed civilians.
[256] Almrei
freely admitted having lied to the Canadian consulate in his application for a
visa in 1998, that he lied to the customs officer at the airport in January
1999, lied to the IRB and CSIS. He says he assumed that they knew that people
lie in coming to Canada. After 9/11, he would have freely told
CSIS about his travels had they told him they were aware. He spoke to the RCMP
when they told him they knew about the Almarabh passport. But CSIS was not
interested after the first certificate was upheld. Almrei says he is sorry for
what he has done, not who he is. He acted on the advice of his interpreter who
told him that his travels to Afghanistan
could not be verified as there were no visas issued.
[257] Almrei
contributed $2500 to Almarahb’s bail bond and was repaid after he was released.
Almarahb called him later from the US and
asked for other documents or the name of Almrei’s contact in Montreal.
Almrei refused. He acknowledged having a reputation within the community as a
person who could get false documents. Assumes that was in part due to Agha
spreading the word around.
[258] He
met Ishak at a Toronto mosque in 1999 and worked with him at
the airport on three occasions. Ishak Knew a man who was involved in a cleaning
contract. The first and second jobs were to wash the exterior of aircraft in a
hangar. The third night they cleaned the interior of aircraft in another
hangar.
[259] In
2004, Almrei said that he did not believe that Bin Laden was responsible for
9/11. At that time, he says, he had limited English and believed the conspiracy
theories that were common in the Muslim world. In his culture, conspiracy
theories are the first to be accepted. They blame others for everything done by
Muslims. He couldn’t accept that a Muslim could do such an act. He has read a
great deal since and has no doubt now. However, he still believes that Bin
Laden had given a lot to the Afghan people. Prior to 9/11 Bin Laden to him was
just another person supporting the mujahidin. Now he is disgusted by his
actions.
[260] On
re-direct, Almrei said his reading and exposure to other influences has changed
his view on many things. When he was in Afghanistan, he
did not talk politics. He did not know who funded or controlled the guesthouses
before he went there. No one spoke about Al Qaeda. He is confused about dates
because he used the Islamic or Hijiric calendar until after he was arrested. It
is not synchronized with the western calendar. He admits to blaming U.S.
policy for 9/11 but did not mean that people deserved to die. In Toronto he
knew no one who had been on jihad other than al Kaysee.
The Expert Opinion Evidence:
[261] The
Ministers put forward one witness to be qualified as an expert, Dr. Martin
Rudner. Initially, the respondent sought to have six witnesses qualified as
experts. During the course of the proceedings, the respondent agreed that it would
not be necessary to call two of them as the evidence which they would have
offered was not a matter of controversy between the parties. In the result, the
respondent tendered the opinion evidence of Mr. Thomas Quiggin, Dr. Brian
Williams, Dr. Lisa Given and Sheikh Ahmed Kutty.
[262] In determining whether
to admit the opinion evidence of these five expert witnesses, I considered the
criteria set out in R. v. Mohan, [1994] 2 S.C.R. 9, [1994] S.C.J. No.
36, which are (a) relevance; (b) necessity in assisting the trier of fact; (c)
the absence of any exclusionary rule; and (d) a properly qualified expert. I
had no difficulty concluding that each of the five witnesses satisfied these
criteria, albeit with some limitations.
Dr. Martin
Rudner
[263] Dr.
Rudner holds Master’s Degrees in International Relations and Asian Economics
and Politics from McGill University and the University of Oxford and
a Ph.D. in Asian Studies from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (1974). He is
presently Distinguished Research Professor Emeritus of Carleton University. He
was founding Director of the Canadian Centre of Security and Intelligence
Studies and established the Center for Security and Defence Studies at
Carleton.
[264] In
addition to his academic and research work, primarily focused on Southeast
Asia, Dr. Rudner has organized and contributed to national and international
conferences on intelligence and security issues and has consulted and lectured
on security and counterterrorism issues to various government departments and
agencies. For that work he has a top secret security clearance. He testified at
the Air India inquiry and has served as an expert witness for the Attorney
General in other proceedings.
[265] Dr.
Rudner knows some Arabic, but could not read a newspaper or carry on a conversation
in that language. He is fluent in other Islamic languages, including those
spoken in Indonesia and Malaysia, and speaks French and Hebrew. He has a
depth of knowledge on political developments in the Muslim world, particularly Indonesia,
based on many years of scholarship of the role of religion in international
affairs, particularly the balance between state interests and religious
objectives. In the course of his work in that field, he has gained a broad
understanding of Al Qaeda and its affiliated extremist groups.
[266] Dr.
Rudner was put forth by the Ministers to provide expert evidence on
intelligence and counterterrorism dealing with Al Qaeda and its affiliated
groups and movements around the world and on the misuse of identity documents,
particularly passports, by terrorists and extremist groups in furtherance of
their cross-border operations. He has written on that subject including a
report for the Passport Office on terrorism and document misuse. His work in
this area has been based on the empirical research of others.
[267] Dr.
Rudner provided the Court with insightful and helpful opinion evidence on the
historical, cultural and theological context to the worldwide phenomenon of
Islamic extremism and terrorist violence. In his testimony, he demonstrated a
deep knowledge of the development of fundamentalist Islamic thought including
the Hanbali/Wahhabi school prevalent in Saudi Arabia and
Salafism, the practice of emulating the ways of the prophet and his followers.
This was particularly helpful in understanding the motivations that drive
contemporary Islamic extremists. Dr. Rudner was careful not to equate Wahhabism
and Salafism with terrorism.
[268] Dr.
Rudner has an understanding of security intelligence matters related to
terrorism derived from his broad reading in that field. However, he claims no
expertise with respect to the Afghan conflict, has not visited the region and
it has not been the focus of his research and publications. When it came to the
history of the conflicts in the region, I preferred the evidence of Prof.
Williams who has traveled and conducted research there. Dr. Rudner’s knowledge,
for example, of the Afghan training camps stemmed primarily from publicly
available literature, including the Al Qaeda training manual, and not from any
direct experience in the region and acquaintance with the participants, as has
Williams.
[269] The
Ministers sought to have Dr. Rudner counter the evidence which Mr. Quiggin had
given in the detention review proceedings with regard to the misuse of identity
documents. While Dr. Rudner has written on the subject, he has not conducted
any specific research on that topic and has relied on secondary or tertiary
sources of information, such as newspaper articles, of questionable
reliability. In any event, I did not find his opinion evidence on the subject
to be necessary as the fact that terrorists cross borders with false documents
could be established through fact evidence. For example, the CSIS witness
Robert Young gave several specific examples of known cases.
[270] Dr.
Rudner provided a helpful overview of the origins of modern Islamic extremism
including the founding and spread of the Muslim Brotherhood and the writings of
Syed Qutb and Abdullah Azzam. Qutb was an Egyptian member of the Brotherhood
and influential author, executed in the 1960’s for offences against the state.
Sheikh Abdullah Azzam was a displaced Palestinian with a PhD from Al Azhar
University in Cairo. Funded by the Muslim World League and
other donors, Azzam had set up the Mekhtab-al-Khidemat (MAK) Islamic
services agency with offices in the Middle East and elsewhere, including Europe
and the US, to
facilitate arrangements for Arab volunteers to join the jihad in Afghanistan
against the Soviets.
[271] Azzam
mentored Bin Laden and other Afghan Arabs introducing them to Qutb’s
pan-Islamic ideology centred on the ummah or Muslim nation. He was
assassinated in 1989, allegedly by members of the Egyptian Islamic Jihad
organization who had joined with Bin Laden and other supporters to form Al
Qaeda. While the matter is not without controversy, Azzam is said to have
disagreed with the direction taken by Al Qaeda, maintaining that a proper jihad
was against combatants, and specifically against those who were directly
oppressing Muslims in Muslim lands.
[272] Dr.
Rudner disputed Thomas Quiggin’s and Dr. Williams’ assessments that Azzam was a
moderate. He endorsed the journalist Peter Bergen’s view (Ex. A-, T-4) that
Azzam’s dream was to restore the Khalifa (Caliphate); to unite Muslims
throughout the world under one ruler. Dr. Rudner acknowledged that the severe Wahhabi traditions of
the Arabian peninsula were alien to Afghans who generally followed the Hanafi
school and Deobandi tradition. Azzam urged the Arabs to understand and be
tolerant of Afghan practices they considered un-Islamic. His dispute with Al
Qaeda was mainly over what was to come next. Azzam wanted to extend the jihad
to the neighbouring countries of Central Asia dominated by the Russians. Bin Laden
wanted to take the fight to the Arab heartland to overturn the apostate
regimes. Bin Laden’s innovation was in interpreting the Koranic “verse of the
sword” as justification for external jihad as Islamic self-defence. In Dr. Rudner’s view
they shared the same values. The disagreement was over priorities. For Bin
Laden, the “near enemy” were the apostate regimes that could only survive with
the support of the west or the “far enemy” thus all were subject to attack.
[273] Bin
Laden returned to Saudi Arabia after the Soviets left Afghanistan in
1989. His initial reception was as a hero and celebrity for his role in
supporting the jihad. As described by Peter Bergen (Ex. A-2), he was “lionized”
for having left the typical Saudi millionaire’s comfortable life to join the
jihad in Afghanistan. In Dr. Rudner’s view, as a teenager
growing up in Saudi Arabia and interested in jihad at
this time, Hassan Almrei would have known of Bin Laden’s reputation.
[274] Iraq’s
invasion of Kuwait led to Bin Laden’s falling out with the
Saudi government over the presence of American troops on Saudi territory. Bin
Laden and his entourage moved to Sudan in
1991 at the invitation of the Islamist leader, Hassan Turabi. They left Sudan
in 1996 after pressure was exerted by Saudi Arabia, the
US and Egypt and returned to Afghanistan through Pakistan.
[275] During
Bin Laden’s absence, the jihad in Afghanistan had
continued against the communist government which remained in power with Soviet
support. An alliance of Afghan mujahedin groups formed to defeat the
government. These groups were largely linked by ethnic and tribal ties and
included Pashtun militias under Gulbuddin Hekmatyar and Abdul Rasul Sayyaf,
Tajiks from the Panjshir Valley led
by Burhanuddin Rabbani and Ahmed Shah Massoud, Aburashid Dostum’s Uzbeks from
Mazare Sharif, the Shiite Hazaras and others. While united in opposition to the
government, they couldn’t agree on how power was to be shared when it was
defeated.
[276] When
President Najibullah’s support collapsed in April 1992, Massoud and Dostum
outmanoeuvred Hekmatyar for control of Kabul and
the central government. A government was installed, led by Rabbani. Civil war
ensued. Much of the country was controlled by warlords and local militias. The
Taliban, led by Mullah Omar and mainly Pashtun, emerged in 1994 from the south
and proceeded to gather support and overcome the warlords. Bin Laden returned
in May 1996. The Taliban took Kabul in September 1996. Bin
Laden settled
in Kandahar and took over or set up
a network of training camps and guest houses. According to Dr. Rudner, there
are estimates that about 70,000 mujahidin passed through these facilities from
1996 to 2001.
[277] Dr.
Rudner discussed the Islamic concept of Takfir wa al Hijra. This refers to removal of
oneself from an apostate community (Takfir) and going into exile (wa al Hijra).
In modern times this has been interpreted by extremists as authorizing
emigration or flight to take refuge in western countries to reform, mobilize
and prepare for a return to their homelands. Going to the west was similar to
what the prophet had done in going to Mecca, moving from dār al-harb (the
world of war) to dār al-islām (the abode of peace and freedom).
[278] In
Dr. Rudner’s view, Sunni extremists adopted a doctrine of pretence and
dissimulation (kitman and taquiya) to deceive western authorities, including
the courts, citing a manual for mujahidin entitled “Encyclopaedia of the Jihad”
(Ex. A-1, T-5). He referred to the work of the Syrian Al Qaeda theorist, Abu
Musab al Suri, who promoted a model of distributed leadership.
[279] Commenting
on the debate among experts on this topic (Sageman/Hoffman articles, Ex.A-5),
Dr. Rudner acknowledged that a number of high level Al Qaeda activists have
been killed or captured but he doubts that it has weakened them. In his view,
Al Qaeda is an “action oriented, learning organization”. It doesn’t matter what
their numbers are as they have created the distributed organization planned by
Al Suri, the strategist. On cross-examination, he agreed that the weight of
opinion is that Al Qaeda is now both centralized and diffused in that there are
experts who credibly believe that it is less dangerous today than it was in
2001.
[280] In
his view, Hassan Almrei would have been an attractive recruit for al Qaeda
because of his status as a veteran of the Afghan jihad and contacts with both
Sayyaf and Khattab. His knowledge of how to obtain legitimate or forged travel
documents would have been a useful skill set for a terrorist organization. He
noted that Thailand
has a reputation as a world centre for fraudulent passports and
that Saudi
Arabia was
also known for the production of good quality false passports until the
government cracked down in 2007.
[281] Dr. Rudner did not think
that Almrei’s account of obtaining funds from the Al Haramain Islamic
Foundation for an Islamic school in Afghanistan was plausible. While Al Haramain is a
large organization with its own accountability mechanisms, in his opinion,
people who approached Al Haramain for funding would be couriers between the
requesting agency and the organization. This would require validation and trustworthiness
beyond what Almrei had described. In his view, it was more plausible that
Almrei had couriered money to ibn Khattab for the jihad in Tajikistan and later in Chechnya. Al Haramain created a
Foundation for Chechnya Fund to support the Chechen guerrillas (Ex. A-1,
T-17).
[282] On cross-examination,
Dr. Rudner acknowledged that the Saudi branch of the Al Haramain foundation was
not included in the UN list of financial institutions (Ex. R-2) that funded
terrorism. He agreed that financial transfers in the region would have to be in
currency due to lack of banking systems. He has no personal knowledge of the
Foundation’s practices and could only speculate as to what they would require
to validate a funding request.
[283] Dr. Rudner was
cross-examined closely on the accuracy of sources he had referenced in his
report, including a Washington Times article dated August 1, 2008 (Ex. R-3), an
article on the use of deception by Raymond Ibrahim (Ex. R-4) and the
Encyclopaedia of the Afghani Jihad (Ex. A-7). The content of the Washington
Times article did not support the statement for which it was used as a
reference. There is no explicit reference in the Encyclopaedia to support the
statement that it encourages Al Qaeda members to deceive the court. Dr. Rudner
acknowledged that Mr. Ibrahim’s perspective may be biased.
[284] The witness was taken to
an excerpt from Rohan Gunaratna’s “Inside Al Qaeda” (Ex. R-6) which quotes
Abdullah Azzam as being against the killing of innocents. After Azzam was
killed an extremist faction of MAK joined Bin Laden but the mujahidin who had
been close to Azzam constantly quarrelled with them. To seize control, Bin
Laden had to rely on his Egyptian allies. Gunaratna says the Egyptians killed
Azzam and that it was at least tacitly condoned by Bin Laden.
By acquiescing in Azzam’s murder, Osama
freed the organization from being constrained by its founder’s guiding
principles and rules.
[285] On the classical
doctrine of jihad which partitioned the world into Dar al-Islam and Dar
al-Harb, Dr. Rudner agreed that since 9/11 there have been references to other
worlds; e.g., Dar al Haq or house of truce. People in the Islamic Diaspora to
western countries are arguing this perspective but not those in the Islamic
countries. Taken to some of his writings in 2003-2004 (Ex. R-8, R-9), he agreed
that subsequent events and information have evolved and changed the views he
expressed at that time.
[286] When taken to a text by
Reza Aslan, “No God but God” (Ex. R-7), which asserts that there is an outright
prohibition in the Koran of all but strictly defensive wars, Dr. Rudner said he
sees this as an apologia. He accepts that there is a broader view of jihad in
the Muslim world that is of a greater or spiritual jihad. “Islamism” in his
view encompasses those who believe that action should be taken now to expand
Dar al-Islam. Militant Islamists want to do it with force. On re-direct, he
included Abdullah Azzam in that perspective and cited statements from Azzam’s
work “Join the Caravan” (Ex. A-3, T-2, pp.132-133):
“… jihad is obligatory continuously until
every piece of land that was once Islamic is regained.”
“…jihad when mentioned on its own only
means combat with weapons…”
“the saying, “we have returned from the
‘lesser jihad’ (battle) to the greater jihad” is a false, fabricated hadith…”
Mr. Thomas
Quiggin
[287] Mr.
Quiggin was qualified as an expert witness when he testified during the
detention review proceedings for reasons which are set out in that decision (Re Almrei, 2009 FC 3, [2009]
F.C.J. No. 1). He was permitted then to give opinion evidence on the structure
and organization and evolution of the global jihadi movement. In this hearing,
the respondent also sought to have him qualified as an expert in intelligence
collection and reliability. Mr. Quiggin acknowledged that he is not an expert
in the Koran, Islamic history and Islamic jurisprudence. Nor has he ever
recruited or managed a human source other than in the informal sense of
connecting or networking to collect information.
[288] The Ministers dispute
Mr. Quiggin’s expertise in the reliability of national security intelligence on
the grounds that neither his educational nor his professional credentials nor
his employment history supports a conclusion that he possesses sufficient
expertise in this area. His primary background is in military intelligence.
[289] As I stated, at
paragraph 194 of the 2009 FC 3 decision, there are no specific credentials that
potential experts must have in order to be admitted as experts. Opinion
evidence may be given by a witness “who is shown to have acquired special or
peculiar knowledge through study or experience in respect of the matters on
which he or she undertakes to testify”: Mohan, above, at para. 27. “The
only requirement for the admission of expert opinion is that the expert witness
possesses special knowledge and experience going beyond that of the trier of
fact”: R. v. Marquard, [1993] 4 S.C.R. 223, [1993] S.C.J. No. 119, at
para. 35 quoting from R. v. Beland, [1987] 2 S.C.R.
398, [1987] S.C.J. No. 60, at p. 415.
[290] I
continue to be
satisfied that due to his work history and studies, outlined at paragraphs 187
to 192 of the January 2009 decision, Mr. Quiggin possesses special knowledge
and experience going beyond that of the Court and that his opinion evidence
assists the Court. In my view, that special knowledge and experience extends
beyond the fairly narrow scope on which he was qualified for the detention
review proceedings and includes the field of security intelligence. While he is
not a career intelligence officer, he has been employed in that area by the
Canadian military and several government departments, including the Privy Council
Office, and has studied and written on the subject of assessing the reliability
of raw intelligence.
[291] In addition to his
qualifications reviewed in the previous decision, Mr. Quiggin has recently
taught a course on strategic intelligence analysis at the Canadian Centre for
Intelligence and Security Studies at Carleton University and has undertaken a
study of terrorist groups in 70 countries for the United States Department of
State. I found his opinion evidence on intelligence collection and reliability
and jihadi movements to be helpful and had no qualms in concluding that the
proffered evidence satisfies the Mohan criteria.
[292] Mr. Quiggin was referred
to the respondent’s counsel for consultation by the US military defence
counsel in the Omar Khadr matter. He had delivered a lecture to Guantánamo
defence counsel on intelligence procedures. Mr. Quiggin reviewed the February
2008 public summary and became concerned about several questions: the absence
of references to primary sources; a lack of information about where Mr. Almrei
would fit in the larger scheme of global terrorism; and the irrelevance of
unconnected references to other cases. He says that he would not have agreed to
testify had the government’s allegations in the summary appeared reasonable.
[293] Quiggin met Almrei
before agreeing to testify. He says that he wanted to meet with the respondent
to satisfy himself after reading the Crown’s case. They talked for about four
hours. As a result, he doesn’t think he espouses the Al Qaeda ideology or that
he is a danger to Canada. Almrei shares views
which are critical of American policy and are widely held in the Arab street
and elsewhere. This does not equate in Quiggin’s view with support for Al
Qaeda.
[294] Opinions such as this go
to the ultimate issue and it falls to the Court and not to the expert to make
these determinations: Mohan, above at paragraph 24. Nonetheless, I
thought it was useful to hear Mr. Quiggin's views on these matters as no one
within the government has attempted to interview Mr. Almrei in recent years to
determine whether he supports the Bin Laden ideology.
[295] The witness freely
acknowledged that he is not an academic scholar and that his writings have
appeared primarily in periodicals aimed at practitioners and a more general
readership. He says he respects the role of academics, attends their
conferences and finds their tools of analysis useful. But in his view, real
world experience such as attending Muslim events, as he has done, is also
valuable. From his perspective, there is reason to be optimistic about the
nature of reform in Islam. He agrees with Dr. Rudner that there is a
fundamentalist movement within Islam to return to the traditions of the
Prophet. But, he believes there is also a growing effort among many Muslims to
interpret Islam in a more modern and moderate way.
[296] Mr. Quiggin does not
profess to be an expert on the Koran but has read widely and consulted others
on how Koranic concepts related to the extremist ideology espoused by Bin
Laden. This evidence fell within the outer boundaries of what I considered to
be his expertise. In his understanding, defensive jihad is clearly set out
within the Koran as the obligation to defend a Muslim majority territory.
Offensive jihad, as he understands it, would be haram, or forbidden. Mr.
Quiggin acknowledges that extremist scholars and Al Qaeda justify aggressive
jihad but he believes that most scholars do not support it. The notion of hijra
or migration has also been distorted by Al Qaeda to support calls to jihad in
foreign countries. Salafism, or the return to the practices and lifestyle of
the first generations to follow the prophet, is also being used
inappropriately. As is the concept of shahid or martyrdom in the context
of suicide bombings. This is justified only by extreme ideologues. The
mainstream view is that it is not permitted in Islam.
[297] Takfir or the concept of
declaring someone an infidel or apostate has been adopted by Al Qaeda to
justify killing anyone who doesn’t agree with them including Muslims living in
infidel lands. Devout Muslims are offended by this use of the principle; that
Al Qaeda figures without religious credentials would declare someone else takfir.
While counterintuitive, Quiggin considers that the lack of religious knowledge
is more of an indicator of vulnerability to extremism among Muslims. High
practicing individuals, in his view, are more likely to be resistant to such
pressures.
[298] On cross-examination,
the witness was taken back over this ground in detail. He does not dispute that
extremists such as Bin Laden and al Zawahiri may be pious or devout Muslims but
he considers that extremism, in general, does not equate with a deep religious
knowledge. In his view, militants may speak with a religious voice but are
predominantly secular and motivated by political considerations.
[299] In their closing
submissions, the Ministers have argued that Mr. Quiggin erred in his
understanding of some Islamic terms such as hijra. In the Koran, this
refers to the Prophet’s move to Medina. Quiggin spells it differently but defines it
correctly as being used in the modern sense to refer to “migration”. The
transliteration of Arabic terms to English allows for a considerable variation
in spellings. In any event, I have put little weight on this or other
differences between the witnesses on terminology. Aside from Sheik Kutty and
Hassan Almrei himself, none of the others are native Arabic speakers and all
rely on English translations.
[300] Mr. Quiggin observed
that there is a problem of access to reliable information in the study of
jihadism and a risk of state actors exaggerating the threat for their own
purposes. He discussed the growth of the “intelligence industry”; i.e., private
contractors producing analysis for profit and creating websites to feed the
“terror industry”.
[301] One example of this in
the government reference documents are a series of reports attributed to an
organization called “ERRI” which produced a “Daily Intelligence Report”. This,
as it turned out when the Court asked for an explanation, was a website created
by a group of American paramedics and other first responders in 1990 which
later was turned into a news aggregator service. In other words, it picked up
and repeated news reports from other services. There is no assurance that this
information is reliable.
[302] In
Mr. Quiggin’s view, intelligence is simply processed knowledge whether it
consists of classified or unclassified information. The purpose of intelligence
is to provide warning and understanding. Concerns about the reliability of
intelligence can arise from many different issues: fixed mindsets, cognitive
bias, stove-piping, deception and disinformation, transliteration and
translation problems, cultural or contextual differences.
[303] Mr.
Quiggin provided examples of how these concerns may cause problems. Of
particular relevance were his comments about human source information. This
information is highly valued by the intelligence community but comes with high
risks. The personal backgrounds of such sources may be questionable and there
is always the risk of embellishment where the source provides information he or
she thinks the handler wants to hear. This is particularly the case where the
source has become a directed agent. The fact that a source may be generally
reliable does not mean that they are reliable every time or the time that is
important.
[304] On
cross-examination, the witness gave the example of a human source known as
“curve-ball” who was relied on by the US
government in the lead up to the invasion of Iraq. The
information provided by that source was highly valued but has since been almost
entirely discredited.
[305] Mr.
Quiggin also pointed to the fact that intelligence information does not age well.
As a general rule, information that is six months old should be verified.
Information that
is believed to be credible at one time because of the source may prove to be
inaccurate later. It may have been fair to rely on it at the outset but such
reliance would be invalid later if additional and contradictory information is
available. This was, in my view, a telling observation with respect to much of
the intelligence relied upon by the government in this case.
[306] The
witness discussed reliability indicators and a methodology used by the Canadian
military to assess intelligence. He reviewed what were, in Mr. Quiggin’s view,
significant problems with the reliability of some of the open sources used in
this case. These raised issues to him of accuracy and timeliness. Events
described were subsequently determined not to have happened. The reports
contain evasive words such as “suspected”, “said to have”, “according to”,
“links to” which indicate that the information has not been substantiated. His
concern was that there was no indication of a strenuous form of information
checking by either the CSIS analysts who included this information in the SIR
and the public summary or their supervisors.
[307] The
witness came back to this on redirect. He stated that he was surprised to learn
that the summary had been written seven years into the case. He could have
understood and accepted the problems with it if it had been written at the
outset. There was great pressure on intelligence services at that time, the
indicators were weak, experts were not available and it was difficult to find
references to substantiate the information. But seven years later, the
selective use of misleading information is inexplicable, in his view.
[308] An
example of this was the use of a reference to a newspaper account of Lord
Carlisle’s report on the operation of the UK
anti-terrorism legislation (T-109) rather than the primary source, the report
itself. The headline and body of the newspaper article were misleading. In
Quiggin’s view, the report itself was not used in the public summary because it
did not support the proposition for which it was cited while the misleading
news report did.
[309] Quiggin
disputes the characterization of Ibn Khattab in the public summary as being a
member of the Bin Laden network. He is aware of the controversy over this
amongst historians and of the information that Khattab had met Bin Laden during
the anti-Soviet jihad. His understanding is that Khattab was a Bedouin from the
Saudi Arabia/Jordan border area. His mother was Circassian, i.e., from the
north Caucasus. Writings about him are largely retrospective. His brother has
been quoted as saying Khattab had a deep hated of the Russians, stemming from
the oppression of his mother’s people. He was a late-comer to the Afghan jihad
but participated in the fighting at the same time as Bin Laden. Khattab stayed
in Afghanistan after the departure of the
Soviets for the on-going civil war at the time when Bin Laden had gone back to Saudi
Arabia and was concerned with the Kuwaiti invasion. Khattab
participated in the Tajik civil war which involved a coalition of liberal and
fundamental Islamists against government forces from the north supported by the
Russians.
[310] There
are two points of view about Ibn Khattab, according to the witness. One which
says that he subscribed to global jihad. The other says that he went to Chechnya to
kill Russians because of his personal history and interests. The Chechen
insurgents were fighting their traditional enemies, the Russians. They did not
change their target after Khattab became involved and allied himself with their
leader Basayef. That is, they did not then join the global jihad against the
West. The Chechens were grateful for support but would not submit themselves to
Khattab's command. Moreover, while Bin Laden may have had an interest in the
Chechen jihad, it could not be said that the Chechens had a strong interest in
Al Qaeda.
[311] Regarding
the kidnapping of civilians employed by non-governmental organizations in Chechnya, an
allegation against Khattab, in Quiggin’s view they may have been regarded as
legitimate targets if they were perceived to be assisting the enemy. If Khattab
was involved in that, it would make him a “bad guy” but not necessarily a
member of Al Qaeda. In Quiggin’s view, the claim that Khattab was responsible
for terrorist bombings against Russian civilians is typical Russian
disinformation. Terrorist bombings were not Khattab’s style. He preferred
direct frontal attacks on military forces and would videotape them for their propaganda
value.
[312] One
has to look at the man himself, according to Mr. Quiggin. There is no record of
hostile statements by him against the US or Israel. The
quote attributed to Khattab (Ex. A-1, T-4) regarding attacks on US troops in
Saudi Arabia < “They
seized our territory, and Muslims have the right to seek such a solution” > is a
widely held view among Muslims because Saudi Arabia is the site of two of their
most holy places.
[313] On
cross-examination, Quiggin disagreed with the suggestion that Khattab had
Islamicized the Chechen conflict. In his view, the Chechens were Muslims to begin
with, albeit mainly secular, and Khattab was not there long enough to have had
that much influence on them.
[314] Regarding
Sayyaf, Quiggin believes that his background is clearer. He is an Afghan
Pashtun who studied in Egypt and speaks fluent Arabic and English.
Addressed by the honorific title Ustad, he qualified to teach Islamic law and
was a Kabul University Professor. While in Egypt he
probably fell under the influence of the Muslim Brotherhood. Sayyaf emerged as
a combat leader during the anti-Soviet jihad and was identified by the Arabs,
including the Saudi government, as someone they could deal with. Sayyaf was
based in the south but also operated in the north. Most of the real fighting
was done by the Afghans rather than the Arab volunteers. The post-war mystique
about the role of the MAK and Al Qaeda is overblown, in Quiggin’s view.
[315] Sayyaf
had authority over his own guesthouses and camps. He provided training for his
own people. At the outset, during the anti-Soviet war, he had a positive
relationship with Bin Laden. But his focus was on Afghanistan and
not other countries. He shared the common view among Muslims about the presence
of US troops in Saudi Arabia. Sayyaf supported Rabbani
and fought with the northern alliance as the Americans came in. And he was
sought out by the US special envoy in 2003 to form part of the new
administration. In Quiggin’s view, he is not known to support the global
jihadist agenda or to have any territorial aspirations outside Afghanistan.
[316] The
witness was taken to Exhibit A-2, T-3, Kathy Gannon’s account in “I for
Infidel” of a meeting in Pakistan’s tribal region which suggests that
Sayyaf willingly joined in the plot against the West. According to Quiggin,
the outcome of the meeting does not suggest that Sayyaf submitted himself to
the authority of an outsider and joined the global jihad. He remained focused
on Afghanistan and loyal to Rabbani.
[317] On cross-examination, he
acknowledged that the name of the Abu Sayyaf Islamist militant group in the Philippines was derived from the
Afghan Sayyaf after the father of the founder had stayed in one of his
guesthouses during the anti-Soviet jihad. Other documents indicate that among
the persons who stayed at his guesthouses over time included Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed and leaders of Jamayah Islamaiah from Indonesia (A-2, T-10). The US
Department of State reports on Afghanistan for 1995 and 1996 say that Sayyaf continued to harbour and
train potential terrorists. On redirect, Quiggin questioned the reliability of
those reports as the Americans did not have personnel on the ground in Afghanistan at the time.
[318] The
dispute in the MAK between Azzam and Bin Laden arose because the former
preferred to work outwards in Central Asia.
Others such as Bin Laden favoured returning to Egypt and Saudi
Arabia to overthrow those governments. After Azzam is killed, Bin
Laden fell under the influence of the virulent ideology of the EIJ members such
as Ayman al Zawahiri. Many of the Afghan Arabs began to drift away to get on
with their lives. Some went on to the jihad in other Central Asian countries.
Others coalesced around Bin Laden and Al Qaeda.
[319] In Mr. Quiggin’s view,
it is a misconception that the Muslim Brotherhood and Al Qaeda are allied in a
common cause. In 1973, the Brotherhood chose to abandon violence as
counterproductive. Some did not accept and formed Egyptian Islamic Jihad,
including Ayman al Zawahiri. There has been no major terrorist incident
attributable to the Brotherhood since. The Syrian chapter later followed suit.
Zawahiri’s book “The Bitter Harvest” in 1991 was an attack on the Brotherhood.
The head of Al Qaeda in Iraq issued a similar
condemnation of the Brotherhood in 2003. Members of the Brotherhood are treated
by Al Qaeda as apostates.
[320] In
reference to Hassan Almrei’s travels, Quiggin does not believe that someone who
went to jihad in 1990-92 would be necessarily a threat to the security of Canada. He
acknowledges that going to Tajikistan during their civil war
would raise a concern to analysts. The association with Khattab and Sayyaf in
itself is not a sufficient indicator, in his view, of a security risk.
[321] Al Qaeda’s ideology
while couched in religious terms, is a political movement generated by resentment
against the effects of colonialism. The empirical research of Marc Sageman and
others has demonstrated that it attracts persons from middle class, low
practising family backgrounds with higher education. The core membership was at
a high point in 2001 (2000 – 3000) but recent estimates are of 2-300. There are
about 23 affiliated groups which subscribe to the Bin Laden world view and
recognize Al Qaeda leadership. Other home-grown individuals are inspired to act
and connect with other like-minded persons through the Internet.
[322] The
hypothesis that those who were once connected to Al Qaeda remain so forever
does not stand up to scrutiny in Mr. Quiggin's opinion. Saudi
Arabia has had some success with the rehabilitation of former
extremists and Egypt has released thousands who have not gone
back to violence. The Ministers case is concerned with inferences drawn from
association or linkage to Al Qaeda. The Taliban supported Al Qaeda. Hamid
Karzai supported the Taliban. Canada supports Karzai. If you took the logic to its extreme, in
Mr. Quiggin’s view, one could say that the Canadian government is linked to Al
Qaeda. It is all a question of context.
Sheikh Ahmad
Kutty
[323] Sheikh
Kutty began his education in Islamic studies in India and Saudi
Arabia. He has served as an Imam since coming to Canada. He
then earned a master’s degree in Islamic studies at University of
Toronto and completed the coursework of doctoral studies in Shari’a law at McGill University.
Presently he is a senior lecturer and resident scholar at the Islamic Institute
of Toronto and a non-resident Imam at the Islamic Center of Canada, the Bosnian
Islamic Center and Ansar Mosque. He also serves as a jurist-consult with
IslamonLine.net, an international website supervised by international Muslim
scholars, and on the Figh Council of North America, the pre-eminent Islamic
legal body in North America.
[324] Sheikh is a term of
respect within the community for a person of wisdom. Sheikh Kutty is also an
Imam and a mufti. Imam is the term used to describe somebody who leads prayers;
usually one who has memorized the Koran. A mufti is a scholar in Islamic
jurisprudence who issues fatawa (singular is fatwa) or rulings on questions
relating to the Islamic faith, including acts of worship, family life and
business transactions. He has written a number of scholarly papers on subjects
such as Wahhabism, Sufism and translated one of the works of Sayyid
Qutb from Arabic into his native language, Malayalam. He has also lectured
at conferences, seminars as an expert on Islamic thought, Islamic law and Islam
in general.
[325] The Ministers
acknowledged that Sheikh Kutty’s lifelong study of Islam and his recognized
expertise in his community render him an expert in Islam. I had no difficulty
in accepting his opinion evidence on the Islamic concept of jihad and the
meaning of other Islamic terms.
[326] Sheikh
Kutty explained his understanding of several terms which frequently arose in
the evidence:
Dar
ul-Islam vs. Dar ul-Harb: realm of Islam vs. the realm of war.
The place is said to be Dar ul-Islam where there is no war and everybody is
free to practice their religion. When Muslims are not free to practice their
religion, that is said to be the realm of war and persecution. Sheikh Kutty
explained that this division of the world is viewed by modern scholars as
irrelevant as everyone in democratic countries is free to practise their
religion.
Hafiz:
one who has memorized the Koran. Memorization and recital of the Koran is
valued as one of the most effective means of transmitting the Divine Word in
Islam.
Harith/hareth:
derived from a hadith “truest name is al hareth”; someone who strives and
earns. Considered a very good kunya for someone who is religious.
Hijra:
original concept is of immigrating to another country as a place of refuge.
Kunya/Kunyah
(pl.): a common term of endearment and respect for males in Arab communities.
It is not a name but something one is called.
Ribat:
root is the Arabic word to tie, meaning to bind yourself together in
solidarity. Muslims practice spiritual ribat – worshiping and meditating to
God. By extension, it is used in the sense of guarding the frontier of Islamic
territory where one might be called upon to engage in battle. Defending Islamic
territory is considered fard al-kifayah, a sacred and collective duty.
Ribat is a valid and important contribution where there is a legitimate jihad.
Shahid/Shaheed:
literally one who testifies. The Islamic concept is that of standing as a
witness of truth and justice. One who gives his life for the truth is called
Shahid. The term has been distorted in its modern application to suicide
bombers as taking one’s own life is a cardinal sin of Islam.
Takfir:
describing someone as an apostate; a Kaffir. The Sunni mainstream does not
characterize anyone who prays to Mecca as
apostate. But the term was employed by Sayid Qutb, a “born again Muslim” and
not a scholar, to refer to anyone who did not rule according to Sharia law.
Taqiyah:
This is a Shia term, not Sunni. During a time of oppression by majority Sunni’s,
a Shi’ite may disguise himself as a Sunni. Dr. Rudner had discussed this in the
context of the Al Qaeda approved practice of deception before the authorities.
[327] The
witness explained that there have been more than 13 schools of jurisprudence in
Sunni Islam. Some became predominant in different regions. To-day there are
four main schools. Hanafism was the official school of the Ottoman Empire and
the dominant tradition in North India, Pakistan and Afghanistan. In
South India, the dominant school is the Shafi’i. Saudi Arabia
follows the literalist tradition of the Hanbalis. Malakis are mainly in North
Africa including Egypt. Wahhab was a Hanbali who struggled
against some of the practices that were deemed pagan or foreign such as Sufi
mysticism. Salafists are traditionalists who wish to go directly back to the
original sources; the early supporters of the Prophet. To-day most Salafis
would say that they do not belong to any of the schools.
[328] In
Sheikh Kutty’s view, the tragedy of Islam to-day is that there are engineers
such as Bin Laden who claim to be scholars and are giving rulings based on
their interpretation of the original Koran. The study of the original Koran
requires an understanding of classical Arabic that takes years to acquire. The
people most likely to adopt the Bin Laden philosophy are those who are not well
brought up in Islam; those who are upset by other things and seek a religious
justification for what they want to do; not those who are well educated in the
faith. Similarly, the Taliban were half-learned scholars; a danger to faith as
much as half-learned doctors are a danger to health.
[329] Sheikh Kutty testified
that the word “jihad” stems from a root which means to exert oneself to the
utmost. It is used in the Koran primarily to refer to exerting oneself for the
sake of God to realize his will. In the widest sense, it includes all forms of
struggle to make truth and justice prevail. The main or supreme form of jihad
(often referred to as al-jihad al-akbar) is spiritual or internal
warfare (mujahada) to master one’s self. He acknowledged that the
Koran does call for making jihad against the kaffirs or infidels but in the
spiritual sense, not military.
[330] Each
Muslim is bound by the five Pillars of Islam: profession
of faith (shahadah), prayer five times daily (salat), almsgiving
(zakat), fasting during Ramadan (sawm), and pilgrimage to Mecca once in a lifetime (hajj). Jihad is not
one of the five pillars, but spiritual jihad engages all Muslims every day.
[331] Another aspect of jihad
is a collective military duty. The verses that sanctioned the use of force in
jihad were revealed in the aftermath of the oppression of the Prophet and his
followers. According to Sheikh Kutty, military jihad is only allowed in the
following cases:
a.
To defend one’s right to practice one’s faith;
b.
To defend oneself against aggression; and
c.
To aid those who suffer persecution and aggression.
[332] In
Sheikh Kutty’s view, the only legitimate jihad is defensive jihad. Muslims may
not engage in military or offensive jihad against those who allow them to live
in peace. They may only fight combatants and can not attack non-combatants such
as women and children. For a jihad to be legitimate, it must be declared by a
legitimate authority. Many Muslim scholars said that fighting the Soviets and
liberating Afghanistan from the occupation was a
valid jihad. This was supported by Saudi Arabia.
Muslim scholars have also agreed that what happened in Tajikistan and Chechnya
called for a legitimate jihad.
[333] Acts
of terrorism such as those committed by Al Qaeda do not fall under the category
of legitimate military jihad sanctioned by the Islamic faith. In Sheikh Kutty’s
view they are in clear violation of a number of established principles laid out
in the Koran including that one cannot take one’s own life such as in the
course of a suicide bombing.
[334] Sheikh
Kutty disagrees with Dr. Rudner’s view of Islam requiring either conversion or
death. He says that Islam recognizes the rights of religious minorities to
autonomy. One can’t be forced to convert. The result would be null and void
because of the notion that there must be no compulsion in religion. He says
that Koranic verses have been taken out of context for political reasons. The
references relied upon are those which refer to attempts by pagan tribes to
defeat the Prophet and his supporters. The Koran sanctioned attacks on them.
The witness acknowledged that there have been historical instances of forced
conversion; in India, for example, during the Mughal Empire.
[335] On
cross-examination, Sheikh Kutty disagreed with Azzam’s description of jihad, in
particular that it referred only to combat with weapons (Ex. A-3, A-31). He
disagreed with the proposition that Islam was spread only from the battlefield
and described how it was propagated in his region of South India by wandering
Sufi mystics. He discussed how some mixed cultural practices with Islamic
religious obligations. He agreed that US
foreign policy is not a justification for murder in Islam and neither is the
presence of US soldiers in Saudi Arabia so
long as they are not desecrating the holy places.
Dr.
Lisa Given
[336] Dr. Given is an
Associate Professor in the School of Library and Information Studies, Faculty of Education,
at the University
of Alberta.
In 2007 she became the director of the International Institute for Qualitative
Methodology at the University of Alberta. She holds a Ph.D. in
Library and Information Science.
[337] Dr. Given was tendered
as an expert in research methodology in determining the reliability of
documentation. She was asked by counsel for the Respondent to review and
comment on the reliability of the sources cited in the Summary of the Security
Intelligence Report prepared by CSIS.
[338] Dr. Given currently
teaches graduate level courses in the areas of research methods and information
literacy. She trains students in effective scholarship practices, including the
critical assessment of information resources. Dr. Given has testified as an
expert witness in information behaviour in two previous Federal Court cases,
including one her affidavit evidence was accepted by this Court.
[339] The
Ministers object to Dr. Given’s opinion evidence on the ground that it trenched
on the court’s function of assessing the reliability and weight of the
documentary evidence. They contend that her opinion is circumscribed by her
lack of expertise in the subject matter at issue in this case. In that regard,
they submit, her opinion evidence does not meet the necessity criterion as she
is not better placed than the Court to determine the reliability of a newspaper
article or Internet report. They accept that she may and did offer fact
evidence in relation to what she found when she went to Internet websites and
described the content of the documents in the references indices.
[340] I
found Dr. Given’s evidence to be helpful, particularly her testimony about the
five core criteria that are used in library and information science to
determine the reliability of information: authority, accuracy, objectivity,
currency and coverage. These criteria are simply a framework which anyone can
use to assess the credibility and reliability of a document. They invite
questions such as who has written the document, what are their credentials,
what is their stance on the issues, do they have a bias or a particular agenda?
What is the authority of those who are cited or quoted in the document itself?
Can the factual content of the information be verified? Is the information
current? Has new information come to light that may call into question an
earlier report. Is the information complete or has an excerpt been pulled out
of the context of the rest of the document?
[341] Dr.
Given’s evidence assisted the Court in considering the reliability of the
information in the reference sources. She illustrated how those criteria could
be applied to documents that CSIS had relied upon in preparing the SIR. In
doing so, Dr. Given gave her opinion that the information in certain documents
did not satisfy the criteria. She did not say that the content of the
information was incorrect as she is not an expert in the subject matter, but
that it would be difficult for an impartial reader to assess reliability when
insufficient information was provided.
[342] For
example, on-line organizations such as the “IntellCenter” provide little
information about their methods or the people behind them. There is a circular
citation pattern in which organizations such as this cite each other’s reports.
This may lead the reader to believe that their sources are authoritative or
that they are reporting more information than is actually the case. The firm
Global Security is said to have been founded by John Pike in 2007 but no
details are provided about his educational background and credentials. Who
funds the organization?
[343] The
document at tab 85
is said to have been last modified 27-04-2005 but what information was
modified? There is no authority to the information from her
perspective. The source of the document at tab 8, the ERRI website, is replete
with hyperbolic language. There is no information about the authors and the
vast majority of the links at its web site are dead and not being kept current.
This is not a credible source.
[344] In
other documents, questions of possible bias may be raised such as with
Bodansky’s book on the Chechen Jihad (tab 136), given his alleged links with
Russian intelligence. No citations are provided for the sources of Bodansky’s
information. In other instances, the document contains a bald statement such as
that found at tab 90 with no attribution: “Khattab is thought to have become
involved with Bin Laden…”. The source is an article from The Express newspaper
in the UK reporting on a football coach’s despair that his team has to play in
war torn Dagestan.
[345] On
cross-examination, Dr. Given acknowledged that the anonymity of a confidential
source does not make the information inaccurate and that on-line sources such
as Wikipedia can contain accurate information. With some on-line sources, such
as the Jane’s publications, her review was limited as she did not have a
subscription. However, she did not accept that the subscriber content would
necessarily provide more detail of the sources. She agreed that she could have
researched the authors of some of the sources on-line and found more
information about them.
[346] A
document at tab 25 posted on July 6, 2004 in Jane’s Intelligence Review is said
to be authored by a Dr. Christopher Jasparro of the “Asia Pacific Center for
Security Studies” which appears to be linked with the US government. One would
have to know who Dr. Jasparro was to give this report credit. Counsel for the
Ministers produced a syllabus for the US Naval War College listing him as an
instructor in security matters. Dr. Jasparro attributes the Madrid
bombings to Al Qaeda. A report at tab 27 from Madrid
dated March 9, 2006 says that the results of a two year investigation concluded
that it was the responsibility of home-grown radicals.
[347] The
point of this testimony, as Dr. Givens reiterated on re-direct examination, is
that no one could assess the reliability of the Jasparro document from its
presentation without more information. In many instances, the documents relied
upon in support of statements in the public summary contain no detail about the
source of the information.
[348] Dr.
Given’s evidence drew my attention to questions about the sources that were not
apparent on the face of the documents. Ultimately, it is for the Court to
determine whether the information provided by the Ministers is “reliable and
appropriate” in the meaning of the statute.
Dr. Brian
Williams
[349] Professor
Williams is Associate Professor of Islamic History at the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth. He
teaches Middle Eastern and Central Asian history and the focus of his research
is on Central Asia, Afghanistan and Chechnya. He
previously lectured at the University of London School of Oriental and African
Studies in Middle Eastern-Balkan History and at the University of Wisconsin in
Islamic Central Asian and Medieval Middle Eastern History.
[350] Professor
Williams has a Ph.D. in Middle Eastern and Islamic Central Asian History and
two Masters’ degrees, one in Russian and East European History and another in
Ottoman Language and Turkic History. Professor Williams has published two books
and has contributed to over 60 chapters and journal articles on Al Qaeda and jihadism
in Afghanistan, Central Asia and Chechnya. He
has also had his work reported in Time Magazine and the New York Times.
[351] In
addition to his academic background, Professor Williams has had hands-on
experience in areas relevant to this case. He carried out field work in Afghanistan for
the Central Intelligence Agency’s Counter-Terrorism Center in
2007 tracking suicide bombers and has served as an advisor for the U.S. Army’s
Special Operations Command and Joint Information Operations Warfare Command. In
2008 he wrote the field manual for the U.S.
military on Afghanistan and testified as an expert witness in the trial of
Osama Bin Laden’s driver, Salim Hamdan, the first trial held at Guantanamo Bay.
During his travels, Professor Williams had an opportunity to interview Taliban
prisoners of war and Al-Qaeda linked figures such as Abu Hamza Al Masri.
[352] Professor
Williams has lived in a number of different countries, including Turkey, Kazakhstan,
Russia in the former Soviet Union and the Ukraine. He
has also traveled to various zones of jihad and terrorism in Central Asia and
the Middle East from the Caucasus and Kosovo to Afghanistan and
Kashmir. He speaks Turkish, Turkmen and Russian. He does work for the US
government including training special operations forces and marines and had a
top secret clearance. In addition to his field work for the CIA, he was
returning to Afghanistan this year for the US Army.
He has also worked for Scotland Yard and Afghan intelligence. In short,
Professor Williams’ experience is both academic and practical.
[353] Dr.
Williams was tendered as an expert on the roles and relationships of the
warlords, foreign jihadis, Chechens and terrorists who were operating in the
region during the relevant timeframe. The Ministers accepted that he was qualified
to give opinion evidence in this area due to his research and writing on the
links between the Afghan Arabs in the Chechen conflict in general, and the
prominent role that Khattab and his Arab followers played in that conflict.
[354] The
Ministers contend, however, that Dr. Williams’ report descends into advocacy
and is not in the proper format for an expert opinion. They contend that the
report argues the facts and advocates the respondent’s position, “similar to
what one would expect from counsel’s closing argument” citing Dulong v.
Merrill Lynch Canada Inc., (2006), 80 O.R. (3d) 378 at para. 30. They
submit that in his testimony, Dr. Williams proved to be much more balanced and
suggest that he may have initially misapprehended the nature of the allegations
against the respondent. I don’t accept that conjecture. His knowledge of the
Ministers’ case against Hassan Almrei stems directly from the public summary of
the SIR.
[355] Dr.
Williams’ report is highly critical of the content of the public summary. It
lacks the veiled references that one might normally expect to see in an expert
report. But that does not reflect advocacy or an abdication of the neutrality
that the courts demand from experts. Rather, it reflects an academic expert’s
impatience with what he considered to be shoddy work. As Dr. Williams put it,
he would have given the summary a failing grade had it been submitted by one of
his students.
[356] The
Ministers had some success in eliciting testimony more favourable to their case
during Dr. Williams’ cross-examination. In fact, he acknowledged the validity
and strength of some of the documentary evidence assembled by the Ministers’
legal team and the depth of the preparation by counsel. This reinforced my view
of the objectivity of his opinion evidence. Nonetheless, Dr. Williams never
abandoned the view he expressed in his report about the quality of the CSIS
public summary.
[357] I
found Dr. Williams’ evidence to be very helpful in understanding the history of
events in Afghanistan, Tajikistan and Chechnya
relevant to these proceedings and the relationships between key actors in those
events. His perspective on which authors could be considered authoritative was
also very useful as he knows many of them personally, knows their work and how
they came by the information they have published.
[358] Williams
has turned down requests to testify in 14 Al Qaeda related cases. He was
sceptical about this one also but agreed to read the materials. As he did, he
says, he had a growing concern that the government story did not fit what he
knew about the history of the region. He found glaring historical errors and
misstatements. Williams says he would have failed a student who relied on
flimsy internet sources such as those in the public summary. In his view, the
document was prepared under pressure and with orders to find linkages between
Almrei and Al Qaeda. As a result, the analysts used “wiki-intel” to hastily
paste together reckless claims. Williams claims he had never seen such a poorly
prepared analysis of this nature. In reading the summary he hadn’t found the
indicators or “red lights” that would have pointed to Almrei having an Al Qaeda
involvement such as presence at Al Qaeda camps in the Pashtun belt in the
mid-1990s after Bin Laden assumed control of them.
[359] Dr. Williams
noted that very few people were studying Bin Laden and the Taliban prior to
9/11. Post 9/11, he says, many authors with no direct experience in the region
“jumped on the bandwagon” and sensationalized Bin Laden and Al Qaeda.
[360] Williams
had lived in Tashkent while he was doing research for his PhD
prior to 1999. The Taliban were then ethnically cleansing non-Pashtun’s, such
as the Uzbeks in the north. He interviewed the refugees. In 2003 he went to Kabul and
lived with the Uzbek leader, General Abdul Rashid Dostum. He travelled north
through the Hindu Kush, carrying an AK-47 for protection, and
interviewed Taliban prisoners of war. In 2005 he spent time with the Tajiks and
lived in Kunduz, the area of the Taliban’s last stand in 2001.
[361] Dr.
Williams provided an overview of the development of Al Qaeda and its revival of
the ancient concept of jihad that had died out in the modern era with
nationalism, pan-Arabism, Baathism and other secular political movements. They
did this with the CIA’s support to fight the Soviets and attracted Arab
volunteers. But the fighting was done mainly by the Afghans. It was a “Jihad
tour” for the Arabs. The “Gucci Jihadis” came with lots of money for the
adventure and to go home and glory in it. They weren’t well trained, didn’t
fight well and were more of a burden for the Afghans. None of them were a
decisive factor in the war against the Soviets. Most went home but some, like
Khattab, stayed on to defend Islam in other territories.
[362] The
larger jihad movement is part of Williams’ research and teaching interests.
After 9/11, he says, it was conflated with Al Qaeda by many. In his view, there
is a difference between those who subscribe to Al Qaeda and those who are part
of the global jihad. Al Qaeda was formed to overturn regimes in the Middle East
that Bin Laden and those who followed him considered apostate such as Saudi
Arabia.
[363] In
contrast, Abdullah Azzam was a comparative moderate who wanted to defend
oppressed Muslims and was not a supporter of terrorism. Abdullah Azzam was
sponsored by the CIA to tour the US and collect funds for the jihad in Afghanistan. He
was no Bin Laden and was ultimately murdered by the Egyptians in Al Qaeda.
Similarly, Khattab took funds from the Saudi Royal Family through their
charities, such as the Al Haramain foundation, at a time when Bin Laden was
actively opposing them. They considered it their religious duty to defend
endangered Muslim communities. Many members of the larger jihad movement were
shocked and appalled by 9/11 and considered Bin Laden to be a disgrace for
violating the Koran’s prescription on killing innocents.
[364] Sayyaf
was the Saudi’s man in Afghanistan and was funded by them and
the CIA through Pakistan’s ISI. He spoke fluent Arabic and
controlled a Pashtun fighting force. A pragmatist willing to work with
moderates He fought for years alongside Massoud in the Northern Alliance and
not with the hard-core fundamentalist leaders such as Hekmatyar who allied
themselves with the Taliban. Williams agrees that Sayyaf did terrible things
such as the campaigns against the Hazzara in Kabul and
has blood on his hands stemming from the civil war period.
[365] The
claim in the public summary that Sayyaf was close to Bin Laden is not supported
by the facts, in Williams view. The two men may have met and been together in
the mujahidin war against the Soviets; but they clearly fought against each
other later. Few Afghans were members of Al Qaeda; Sayyaf was part of the Northern
Alliance that fought the Taliban and Al Qaeda, the majority of whom
are Egyptians. Al Qaeda did not allow Afghans into their inner circles. Al
Qaeda had pushed Sayyaf out of some of his camps. By the mid-1990’s they had
developed real fighting skills and formed an effective unit to support the
Taliban. The “055” Brigade was highly trained and well equipped in contrast to
the amateurs who had previously come as would be mujahidin. The 055 Brigade
fought the northern alliance including Sayyaf’s forces, until the US
invasion in 2001. According to Williams, the authors of the public summary
either didn’t know the history of this period or deliberately ignored it. The
summary was not written by experts. He suspects that the authors went to Google
with about two weeks notice and cobbled the material together.
[366] Williams
doesn’t accept the claim put forward by the Associated Press reporter, Kathy
Gannon, in her book “I is for Infidel” of a meeting in which Sayyaf agreed to
take part in the global jihad with Bin Laden and others. He knows and respects
Ms Gannon but doesn’t consider the story plausible. He says it is similar to
the conspiracy theories of Josef Bodansky. Sayyaf may have met Bin Laden upon
the latter’s return to Afghanistan in 1996. But within a year
he was fighting Al Qaeda and the Taliban.
[367] Khattab
(a kunya from the name of the 4th Caliph after the Prophet) was not
part of Al Qaeda according to Williams. He says that position has been advanced
by the Russian propagandist Joseph Bodansky. Bodansky’s book gives no sources
and he has not been to Chechnya. Bodansky makes wild claims about events
that are not plausible. His work is considered fiction by scholars. Bona
fide intelligence services would not rely upon it.
[368] The
Saudi’s provided support to the Chechens Muslims and hundreds of Saudi citizens
volunteered to go there to fight the Russians. Khattab was admired and viewed
as a hero in Saudi Arabia and mourned when he died.
This contrasts with Bin Laden who is despised. US didn’t have a stake in the
Chechen jihad. Nor did they oppose it. The CIA did not define Khattab as a threat.
Chechnya was not an autonomous republic and was seen by the
Russians as part of their territory. They bitterly complained about the Saudi
involvement.
[369] Khattab
mocked the Russians by inviting captured soldiers’ mothers to come and get
their boys. Williams does not believe that Khattab was involved in the Moscow
bombings. It is counterintuitive, as the Chechens had already won their
independence. He thinks that it was the work of Russian FSB agents seeking to
procure a casus belli. Khattab didn’t approve of terrorism. He called
those who practised it cowards.
[370] “My
Jihad” by Alkai Collins, an American who fought with Khattab says he relished
frontal combat. He was a warrior; idolized for his style of fighting. The
Chechen’s saw him as the sole source of help in their hour of need. But not
everyone there loved him. He went against the Chechen government will by
launching an incursion into Dagestan to defend three villages from a Russian
onslaught. That gave the Russians a pretext for launching a full scale invasion
of Chechnya and launched the second Chechnyan war.
[371] Williams
acknowledged that the material (exhibit A-1) produced for the hearing by
government counsel is more professional and scholarly than what he calls the
Wikipedia research in the summary. But apart from Bodansky's claims, there is
nothing definitive about Khattab and Al Qaeda in the literature. Bin Laden's
main target was Saudi Arabia. But the Saudis supported
Khattab through the charities. Some of the Arabs who went to Chechnya
broke from Khattab and joined Al Qaeda.
[372] Dr.
Williams discussed the civil war that developed in Tajikistan,
after the fall of the Soviet Union. Members of the old communist guard, the
“Red Khans”, continued to rule with an iron fist in a secular government. There
was no democratic development as in the other former Soviet Republics.
Democrats and Islamists and southern Tajiks launched a civil war. The Islamists
called for support from Afghan Arabs saying the Soviets are still here. This
was a continuation of the anti-Soviet, anti-communist jihad.
[373] In
Afghanistan,
the Arab mujahidin joined with those warlords who were trying
to defeat the Communist government in Kabul.
When the Najibullah government was overthrown, the war lords fought a civil war
in Kabul and effectively destroyed the city. They
all had blood on their hands for their actions during this period. Sayyaf was
allied with Masood. Many of the Arabs were sickened by the internecine violence
and left. Bin Laden went to Saudi Arabia and
then to Sudan. Khattab went to Tajikistan.
Others went to Kashmir to fight the Indians. The majority went home to brag
about their exploits.
[374] The
“055 Brigade” was annihilated during the invasion in 2001. The survivors melted
across the border into the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan.
To-day Al Qaeda Central is a more furtive, limited organization, hiding in the
mountains. It lacks the capacity to launch attacks in Williams’ view. More
dangerous to-day is “wannabe Al Qaeda’ism”. But there is a lack of evidence
that they are being directed from Al Qaeda Central. Al Qaeda has few members
remaining; less than 500. They are not splattered across the globe as in the
quicksilver analogy posited by Dr. Rudner. There is no evidence of links to the
disparate groups claiming to be modeled on Al Qaeda.
[375] Williams
noted that there have been books written from actual experience in the
mujahidin camps of the 80’s and 90s. Afghan Arabs went from camp to camp
looking for one that suited them. The camps were in very primitive mud house
compounds and the regime was very informal. There was a lot of shooting off of
rifles and praying. The camps were full of dilettantes, adventurers, riff-raff.
It was very ad hoc but incredibly weaponized. AK-47’s were a form of currency.
John Walker Lindh, an American, walked into a camp and was given one. In
contrast, Al Qaeda camps were very serious about security.
[376] The
witness described how the Beit-al-Ansar guest house in Peshawar was
initially run by Sayyaf. It closed down in 1992 and was reopened in the late
1990s and run by Al Qaeda. If Almrei had been there in 1997 or later, it would
be much more likely that he was Al Qaeda.
[377] The
guest houses were not training facilities. They were set up in residential
areas and were more like a hotel. The tribal areas of Pakistan and Afghanistan do
not have hotel chains. A series of guest houses facilitated the movement of men
through the region. Williams had stayed in the one set up by Bin Laden in Kabul and
in another in Bamiya. They were very primitive with no lights and no showers.
Animals were kept downstairs. These were pre-existing guest houses that Bin
Laden simply bought. He had bought a great deal of property in Afghanistan
after 1996.
[378] During
a break in the testimony, Dr. Williams and Almrei spoke briefly about this.
Almrei apparently told him that he had stayed at Beit-al-Ansar. This was
brought to my attention following the break by counsel for the Ministers and I
cautioned the witness and Mr. Almrei not to speak with each other again. The matter
was not pursued further and I do not believe that it influenced the testimony
of either Dr. Williams or Mr. Almrei.
[379] Williams
found it impressive that the respondent can recite the Koran. It suggests he
was raised in a good family. Al Qaeda members tend to be “born again Muslims”,
more convinced and certain in their beliefs. They tend to be people who felt
alienated from the society around them and began going to Mosques in their
20’s. Someone who had a good normal Islamic upbringing is unlikely to do this.
This applies as well to the wannabe groups. They are concerned about Israel,
angered at Saudis and learn to reject their parents’ guidance.
[380] On
cross-examination, Williams acknowledged that he had never been to Chechnya and
doesn’t see himself as an expert on Chechnya. But
he sees himself as qualified to give opinion evidence on the overlap between
the jihadists who travelled from Afghanistan to Chechnya. He
believes that someone could not be simultaneously a member of Al Qaeda and
Khataab’s organization but knows of 5 people who left Khattab and joined Al
Qaeda. He accepts that people who were in Sayyaf’s camps could have later
joined Al Qaeda. To Williams, the facts that Almrei attended Sayyaf’s camp, was
a follower of Khattab and did not go to Sudan are
among the strongest indicators that he was not a member of Al Qaeda.
[381] Williams
agreed that Sayyaf engages in bombastic anti-western rhetoric. He says that all
of the Afghan leaders ranted and raved about western intervention and used the
same language. He was taken to a series of articles and book chapters which
tended to suggest that Sayyaf and Bin Laden were close during the anti-Soviet
jihad and the subsequent civil war. Bin Laden had attempted to achieve a
reconciliation between the Pashtun warlord Hekmatyar (now allied with the
Taliban) and the Tajik leader Massood. Massood and Dostum seized control of Kabul
after the fall of Najibullah and Massood became defence minister. Williams sees
Bin Laden’s efforts at this time as an exercise in pragmatism.
[382] There
were running battles in the streets of Kabul in
1993 between Hekmatyar’s, Sayyaf’s, Dostum’s and Massood’s forces in the midst
of the civilians. Atrocities were committed. None of them were guiltless.
Sayyaf is likely guilty of war crimes for the actions of his militia against
the minority Shi’ite Hazzara community.
[383] Exhibit
A-28 is an excerpt from “Architect of Global Jihad” by Brynjar Lia, a book on
the life of Abu Mus’ab al-Suri, jihadi thinker and Al Qaeda strategist. At page
82 is a reference to training in the Sada camp by al-Suri, and Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed. The author states that the camp had been established with the help of
Azzam and Sayyaf but was only used by the nascent Al Qaeda to a limited extent
for “limited duration recruits”. In Williams view, these people were not Al
Qaeda at the time. The training of the Arabs was very perfunctual. It was
considered more of a burden by the hardened Afghan veterans. Some of the Arabs
came more as tourists during spring break or summer vacation; jihad was cool
for young Arab males.
[384] According
to the author Jason Burke (Ex. A-2, tab 5), Ramzi Yusef, nephew of KSM, spent
some time as a tutor in Sayyaf’s Khaldan camp where he met Ahmed Ajaj, his
accomplice in the 1993 WTC bombing. The work includes references to Sayyaf’s
“University” in Pabbi, near Peshawar, and alleged
involvement in an attempt to kill Benazir Bhutto. Sayyaf’s compound in Pabbi
was searched by the Pakistani authorities following the 1995 attempt on
President Mubarak in Ethiopia. Williams says this was not an Al Qaeda
action.
[385] Williams
agrees that unsavoury people who passed through Sayyaf camps in the 1990’s were
later engaged in terrorism but considers that Al Qaeda was at that time a
separate operation.
He agrees that an association with Sayyaf does not preclude a linkage with
terrorism but holds to the view that being in Sayyaf’s camps while Bin Laden
was in Sudan is a contra-indication.
[386] US
Department of State reports on Afghanistan for
1994 and 1995 were entered in evidence (tabs 11 and 12 of Ex. A-2). Williams
did not doubt the statements in these reports that the Afghan camps, including
those run by Sayyaf continue to harbour and train militants and potential
terrorists.
[387] A
compilation of Dr. Williams’ publications was entered as Exhibit A-30 and he
was cross-examined closely on prior statements he had made in his writings
about events and personages in the region. In one assessment of the role of
foreign fighters in the Chechen insurgency, for example, he had written that
the Arabs who went there perceived themselves as holy warriors and were not
engaged in a sectarian or nationalist struggle. He describes them as having
“radicalized’ members of the Chechen armed forces. He didn’t see this as having
had a good effect on Chechnya.
[388] Williams
says he believes that Khattab’s world view was transnational i.e., not bound by
borders, as evidenced by his invasion of Dagestan. The President of Chechnya
was opposed to this because of the provocation it would give the Russians.
Khattab saw this as defensive jihad. But it is more a form of offensive jihad
because it was an external invasion. Williams believes it was a clever ploy on
the part of the Russians for having lured Khattab into invading; they did so by
levelling the villages close to his local family.
[389] Khattab’s
tactics were guerrilla operations. Williams does not agree that Khattab engaged
in terrorist acts during that period. He concedes the point that Khattab’s
activities would have been construed as terrorist by the Russians. But only the
Russians, themselves guilty of state sponsored terrorism in Chechnya,
call Khattab a terrorist. The Chechen leader Basayef had engaged in terrorism
and there is a blurring of the lines between the two.
[390] Williams
testified that he looked long and hard for links to establish operational ties
between Khattab and Al Qaeda. He says that foot soldiers who tired of frontal
combat and wanted something more glorious and dynamic and those who wanted to
wage war against America had to join a different organization.
Khattab had a different enemy – Russia.
Khattab’s website was focused on the military activity against Russia. In
contrast, Al Qaeda’s website glorified the murder of Americans and Jews.
Williams disputes reports that Khattab and Bin Laden fought together. He says
they may have been in a major battle against the Russians at Jalalabad with all
of the other Afghan Arabs. Khattab wasn’t with Bin Laden at Jagi which was the
only battle that Bin Laden led.
[391] Bin
Laden financed the jihad in Chechnya but didn’t personally
join it. His number one concern was Saudi Arabia and
the US. The US because it supports the
Saudi regime. Khattab was supported by the Saudi dynasty. Members of the Royal
Family contributed money to al Haramain. Khattab set up an office with al
Haramain to equip his forces. Williams agrees that some al Haramain offices
also supported Al Qaeda. But the Saudi’s arrested one of their own people for
this. The Chief Mufti of Saudi Arabia spoke out in favour of the
Chechnyan jihad. The Royal Family mourned his death. They revile Bin Laden. It
is permissible to admire Khattab in Saudi Arabia but
Bin Laden is considered a threat to the state.
[392] Williams
agrees that Khattab shared Bin Laden’s view that infidels should be driven out
of Muslim lands and supported the attacks on US military personnel in Saudi
Arabia. He did not condemn Bin Laden in quotes attributed to him
in the late 1990s (e.g., Ex.A-31). Khattab would have subscribed to the
conspiracy theories about US intentions that were then prevalent in the Muslim
world. Williams does not think that Khattab would have condemned another jihadi
but condemned terrorism against civilians. He probably agreed with much of what
Bin Laden was doing or may have believed that his Saudi funding would have dried
up if he had condemned him at that time. But Khattab condemned terrorism
against civilians and the Americans never saw Khattab as a threat.
[393] Williams
held to his view on cross-examination that there were two streams of jihad. One
was led by Abdullah Azzam who held to a clear line against terrorism and
killing fellow Muslims. He sought the creation of a rapid reaction team, the
Azzam Brigades, to attack non-Muslims fighting Muslims. The other stream was
led by the Egyptians, notably al Zawahir who wanted to attack Muslims and use
terror as a tactic. Azzam was not close to the Egyptian extremists. He had
taught at al Azhar University in Cairo and
could not have held that position if he had been viewed as a threat by the
Egyptian Government. He worked with that government to obtain weapons for the
jihad in Afghanistan. Azzam did not want fitna or
dissension within the Islamic community, contrary to Bin Laden.
[394] On
re-direct, Williams clarified that Sayyaf’s training camps south of Jalalabad
were taken over by Al Qaeda about 1998. Sayyaf continued to control territory
north of that city. During the anti-Soviet jihad, all of the Afghan Arabs would
have gone through either Hekmatyar’s camps or Sayyaf’s camps. Of the tens of
thousands, almost all went back home and are living normal lives. Only a small
number went on to become Al Qaeda. Similarly, some of those who went to the
Chechen camps went on to join Al Qaeda. He has identified about 10 who did so
and is surprised there is not more. He suspects it is because Khattab trained
his warriors not to engage in terrorism.
ANALYSIS
Are
the factual allegations against Almrei supported by the information and other
evidence?
[395] In
their closing submissions, the Ministers argue that the foundation for findings
that Almrei is inadmissible to Canada on national security grounds and that the
certificate is reasonable rests on the following alleged facts: Almrei’s
participation in jihad; his connections to others affiliated with Osama Bin
Laden and his network, and with whom, they contend, he shares an extremist
ideology; and his participation in an international document procurement
network.
[396] The
Ministers submit that, prior to arriving in Canada, Almrei engaged in terrorism
by supporting terrorist activity and concealed from Canadian authorities the
fact that he had supported Islamic extremists and had traveled to Pakistan,
Afghanistan and Tajikistan to do so. They claim that he supported
terrorist activity as a member of the terrorist group known as the Bin Laden
network, which includes Al Qaeda. His international contacts and fraudulent
document procurement and willingness to assist with such document procurement,
including for an individual associated with the Bin Laden network, make him a
danger to the security of Canada in the Ministers'
opinion.
[397] The
specific facts relied upon by the Ministers in support of these submissions
include Almrei's belief in jihad, his trips to Afghanistan and Tajikistan to
engage in jihad and his willingness to fight and, if necessary, to die to
defend Muslims. His association with Sayyaf and Khattab is said to be an
indication that he shares a positive view of Bin Laden and a belief in militant
Salafism. Almrei’s admission that he met Nabil Almarabh in Kunduz, Afghanistan,
a suspected terrorist, and later provided him with a false Canadian passport,
gives rise, in the Ministers’ submission, to a reasonable belief that Almrei
could provide material support to a terrorist, in Canada or elsewhere.
[398] To
organize my comments and findings about the information and evidence I will
follow the arrangement of the Amended Public Summary of the SIR filed on March
24, 2009. The closed information and evidence has been taken into
consideration.
Osama Bin Laden, Al
Qaeda and the “Bin Laden Network”
[399] Much
of the information and other evidence presented to the Court concerned Osama
Bin Laden, Al Qaeda and the “Bin Laden Network”. This was offered in support of
the allegation that the respondent is a member of an organization that there
are reasonable grounds to believe engages, has engaged or will engage in
terrorism, as set out in s.34 of the Act. The Amended Public Summary devotes 36
paragraphs and 83 footnotes to establishing the existence of this organization
and its linkage to terrorism.
[400] The
status of Al Qaeda as an organization within the meaning of paragraph 34 (1)
(f) of the Act was not in any doubt in these proceedings. However, there is no
evidence that Almrei is or ever has been a member of Al Qaeda. Thus, the
Ministers' case under that ground of inadmissibility rests on the proposition
that Almrei is a member of the more amorphous notion of a “network” inspired
and led by Bin Laden that engages in terrorism. The respondent disputes that
such an organization exists or that those who are said to be members can be
held accountable for the actions of other individuals operating independently.
[401] The
concept of a “network” does not easily satisfy criteria such as those that
Justice O'Reilly identified in Thanaratnam,
above, at paragraph 31: “identity, leadership, a loose hierarchy and a basic
organizational structure”. These factors undoubtedly apply to Al Qaeda itself
but are less readily apparent the farther removed from Al Qaeda is the group or
individual said to be associated with the network. I note that the "Bin
Laden network" is not a proscribed entity, unlike Al Qaeda, in the lists
of terrorist organizations maintained by Canada, the
United Nations or the United States (Reference Index Vol.1,
T-12, T-13, T-14).
[402] There
is a consensus among the experts that a number of organizations are now
affiliated with Al Qaeda and others draw their inspiration from Bin Laden. Mr.
Quiggin estimated that there were six affiliated groups and about 23 others who
have expressed an ideology sympathetic to that of Al Qaeda. These groups, he
says, are focused primarily on local and regional issues. But these groups
would themselves qualify under the rubric of organizations that engage in
terrorism and membership renders the individual inadmissible. There is no
evidence that Almrei is a member of any of the affiliated groups. At best, the
Ministers assert that he is part of a loosely connected matrix of jihadi
veterans with shared experiences in Afghanistan.
[403] The
home-grown “wannabes” are not recruited, financed or directed by Al Qaeda but
have adopted a similar world view. Examples given by the witnesses include
those responsible for the Madrid bombings, the "Operation Crevice"
conspirators in the United Kingdom, Momim Khawaja and the so-called
"Toronto 18" in Canada. These persons are unquestionably a threat to
national security and public safety but they have no direct connection to Al
Qaeda and it is doubtful, in my view, that they can be said to be part of the
same terrorist organization within the meaning of paragraph 34(1)(f).
[404] As I
understand the Ministers' position, anyone who shares the principles of Al
Qaeda and is in some way linked to it is a member of the Bin Laden network.
Applying the “unrestricted and broad” interpretation approved by the Court of
Appeal in Sittampalam, I accept that Al Qaeda and its affiliated groups
can be termed an organization within the meaning of paragraph 34(1)(f). This
"Bin Laden network" may also encompass those groups that are inspired
by and willing to take direction from Bin Laden but are not formally affiliated
with Al Qaeda: Re Iklef, 2002 FCT 263 at para.54.
[405] Individuals
and groups who have no connection with Al Qaeda cannot be said to be part of
the network without some other indicia of membership such as a willingness to
follow directions from Bin Laden. It is not enough, in my view, to assert
membership in an organization merely on the basis of a shared ideology. That is
what I believe the Ministers have been attempting to do in this case. They
can’t establish that Almrei is a member of Al Qaeda or an affiliated
organization and have attempted to bring him within the scope of this amorphous
concept of a network based on his belief and participation in jihad.
[406] An
"unrestricted and broad" interpretation of organization does not
encompass those who have expressed views that are sympathetic to the ideology
of Bin Laden and Al Qaeda and approval of the actions that they have taken.
That is far too broad a net to cast and would be incompatible with the freedom
of expression guaranteed by our Charter. There has to be something more
to demonstrate that a person who has expressed those views has taken steps to
associate himself with the network and to act in accordance with its
objectives.
[407] I
don’t doubt, as the Ministers assert, that Al Qaeda remains committed to the
use of terrorism to achieve its political goals but it is a matter of
controversy between the experts whether Bin Laden retains the “resources and
organization to launch a terrorist strike in any country he wishes” as stated
in paragraph 9 of the summary. The source given for this proposition is a
January 1999 report from a non-authoritative, and now stale, online source.
While that may have been true in 1999, it is questionable to-day.
[408] In a
paragraph added to bolster the Ministers' case following Mr. Quiggin's
testimony during the detention review hearings it is stated that:
Some scholars and
academics believe that Al Qaeda is no longer a centrally controlled
organization, but recognize that its ideology lives on and that Osama bin Laden
remains a powerful figurehead and inspiration for people around the world.
Still others believe that Al Qaeda remains a viable entity and may be
regrouping in order to spark a new wave of attacks. Yemen has been identified
as a possible new home for Al Qaeda, with Saudi and Yemeni militants joining
forces. (Paragraph 13)
[409] The
paragraph alludes to a debate between two renowned American experts on Al Qaeda
and terrorism: Prof. Bruce Hoffman and Dr. Marc Sageman. Excerpts of their
writings were filed in evidence including articles from the issues of the Foreign
Affairs magazine in which they exchanged their views (Ex. A-5). Hoffman is
a professor at Georgetown University and the author of Inside
Terrorism. Sageman is a former CIA field operative turned psychiatrist and
the author of Understanding Terror Networks and a 2008 work entitled Leaderless
Jihad. It was the publication of that book which led to the debate with
Hoffman. Dr. Williams described Dr. Sageman as the foremost terrorist profiler
in the world and a mentor to him in understanding what attracts recruits to
extremist organizations.
[410] In
essence, the controversy is over the question of whether the West continues to
face a grave threat from Al Qaeda or whether the true menace comes from loose
knit cells of Western born Muslims or Muslim immigrants studying and working in
the West; what Sageman calls disaffected "bunches of guys" who
undergo the process of radicalization together.
[411] Hoffman
maintains that “Al Qaeda Central” or "core Al Qaeda" as the witnesses
variously described it, continues to be a major threat (Ex. A-5, Hoffman, “The
Myth of Grass-Roots Terrorism”, Foreign Affairs, May/June 2008).
Sageman, in rejoinder, says he has never denied that Al Qaeda remains a threat
but asserts that it has been contained operationally (Foreign Affairs,
July/August 2008). High level Al Qaeda personalities have been killed or
captured and the remnants have been forced into remote tribal areas of Pakistan
adjoining Afghanistan.
[412] Dr.
Williams and Mr. Quiggin share the view that core Al Qaeda has been greatly
weakened and no longer has the same power, resources or capacity to train it
had when it was a state within a state under the Taliban. Mr. Young and Dr.
Rudner believe that Al Qaeda Central retains a significant operational
capacity.
[413] While
the experts may disagree about the nature of the security threat and how it can
be managed, it is clear from the evidence that their knowledge and
understanding of the risk has evolved considerably since 2001. This was not
reflected in the SIR and public summary until after Mr. Quiggin was called as a
witness in the detention review proceedings and questioned the Service’s
assessment and the sources on which it was based. I found it troubling that the
work done to prepare the new SIR in 2008 had not kept pace with developments in
the field. And the sources relied upon by the Service were often
non-authoritative, misleading or inaccurate.
[414] The
Ministers dismissed this concern as an inevitable consequence of the
preparation of a narrative report with supporting documentation of varying
degrees of persuasiveness (Ministers' reply submissions para. 16). While it is
true that some information will prove to be merely unpersuasive, that does not
absolve the Ministers and the Service from fairly presenting the information in
their possession.
[415] As
discussed above, the summary cites a news article reporting on Lord Carlisle’s
Fourth Report to the UK Parliament for the proposition that terror suspects
under house arrest have been able to maintain contact with terrorist
organizations or individuals and remain determined to mount attacks in the
future. The full passage which appears at paragraph 58 of the report reads as
follows:
My
view is that it is only in a few cases that control orders can be justified
for more than two years. After that time, at least the immediate utility of
even a dedicated terrorist will seriously have been disrupted. The
terrorist will know that the authorities will retain an interest in his or her
activities and contacts, and will be likely to scrutinize them in the future.
For those organizing terrorism, a person who has been subject to a control
order for up to two years is an unattractive operator, who may be assumed to
have the eyes and ears of the State upon him/her. Nevertheless, the material I
have seen justifies the conclusion there are a few controlees who, despite the
restrictions placed upon them, manage to maintain some contact with terrorist
associates and/or groups, and a determination to become operational in the
future. [My emphasis]
Fourth
Report of the Independent Reviewer Pursuant to Section 14(3) of the Prevention
of Terrorism Act 2005; Lord Carlisle of Berriew Q.C. wrote at paragraph 58:
[416] The
thrust of the actual reference was that most terrorist operatives lose their
utility to those who may be interested in making use of their services when
they have been under the control of the authorities for an extended period of
time. A few will continue to present a risk. This was a finding relevant to
this case given the length of Almrei’s detention. It was not fairly presented
in the Public Summary.
[417] In
the same paragraph of the Public Summary (14), it is noted that one prominent
Al Qaeda militant who had undergone a stringent Saudi rehabilitation program
and was released from custody has recently emerged as a key leader of Al
Qaeda. This is accurate, but ignores the fact that Saudi
Arabia has reported a high degree of success with this program
and that other countries had taken steps to emulate it. The purpose of
including this statement in the summary, presumably, was to dissuade the Court
from taking a chance on Almrei. But the effect was rather to contribute to a
finding that the authors had not sought to be fair and balanced.
[418] Considerable
evidence was heard about the nature of the concept of jihad in Islam. The
public summary, at paragraph 10, describes this as interpreted in two ways by
Muslims: an "internal" jihad that everyone engages in to become a
better Muslim, and an "external" jihad that is necessary to defend
Islam when it is under attack. The summary states that Al Qaeda has adopted the
latter definition as central to Islam. The weight of the evidence, particularly
that of Sheikh Kutty, supports a finding that external jihad can be both
offensive and defensive. The type of offensive jihad undertaken by Al Qaeda is
not supported by the sacred texts in Islam as interpreted by mainstream
scholars.
[419] There
is no dispute between the parties that the jihad against the Soviets and the
Najibullah regime in Afghanistan was supported by the ulemma
or community of Islamic scholars that individually and collectively have the
authority to issue fatawa. This was also viewed by the US and
Middle Eastern governments as a legitimate conflict. The Afghans and the Arabs
who supported them were engaged in a defensive jihad. There was also evidence
that the conflicts in Tajikistan and Chechnya were
approved, if not by the Western governments who had no direct interest in those
affairs, at least by the Saudi ulemma and Royal family. Participation or
support for those actions, in itself, does not provide reasonable grounds to
believe that an individual subscribed to Bin Laden's notion of global jihad or
became a member of his network.
[420] The
summary refers to the creation of training camps and an elaborate
infrastructure by Bin Laden and cites the warnings he issued to the West
(para.11). This is accurate but it ignores the crucial question of timing. This
infrastructure and the warnings followed his return to Afghanistan in
1996. Prior to the fall of the Najibullah regime in 1992, Bin Laden was just
one of the mujahedin leaders operating camps. His role in the fighting was
modest. The bulk of it was done by the Pashtuns, Tajiks and Uzbeks under leaders
such as Hekmatyar, Sayyaf, Massoud and Dostum.
[421] In
paragraph 15, the summary notes that "[b]y 2000, Al Qaeda was estimated to
have operated approximately a dozen camps in Afghanistan where as many as 5000
militants may have been trained who, in turn, may have created cells in 50
countries”. The source for this statement is said in the footnote,
inaccurately, to be the US State Department. The source is actually a newspaper
article that attributes the information to "a recent Central Intelligence
Agency analysis", which is not in evidence.
[422] Applying
Dr. Givens' criteria, it is apparent that this source is not authoritative. But
even if it is taken at face value it does not cover the timeframe in this case.
After 1996 Bin Laden had effectively declared war on Saudi
Arabia and its Western allies, particularly the United
States, and was training terrorists to conduct operations abroad.
But there is no evidence that Hassan Almrei passed through any of Bin Laden's
camps after 1996.
[423] At
best, the evidence indicates that he spent a brief time at the Beit al Ansar
guesthouse in Peshawar in 1990 which was established and run by
the MAK and may have been funded by Bin Laden at that time. That guesthouse was
a way station en route to camps in Afghanistan
which were run by Sayyaf and Hekmatyar. Almrei didn't get to one of those camps
in 1990 because he fell ill. There is no evidence that he was trained or
indoctrinated, as Mr. Young speculated, at that guesthouse. And the witnesses
are all agreed that the vast majority of the 35,000 or more Afghan Arabs who
passed through the camps went home to get on with their lives after their
adventure.
[424] The
supposition that Al Qaeda has created "cells" and sent
"sleepers" abroad is a matter of some controversy. As noted, the sole
source for the statement about cells is a newspaper article from January 2001.
In paragraph 34 of the summary there is a statement that the Bin Laden network
uses "sleepers" in its international terrorist operations. These are
described as individuals who establish themselves in foreign countries for
extended periods of time prior to being given orders to execute an operation.
Preceding the activation of the operation, they may live as regular citizens,
leading unremarkable lives, and avoiding attention from local authorities. The
sole source that is given for these propositions is a 1999 book by Simon Reeve
entitled The New Jackals. The implication is that Mr. Almrei was such a
sleeper. The closed information indicates that is how he was perceived by CSIS
after he came to their attention in 1999. But, as far as I could determine,
this was based solely on the inferences drawn from human source information of
doubtful reliability.
[425] A
great deal of knowledge has been acquired since 2001 about Al Qaeda’s methods
of operation. Sageman, for example, states at pages 106 and 162 of
Leaderless Jihad that there have been no sleeper cells in the United
States with the possible exception of one individual who was
arrested in December 2001, which he doubts. Dr. Williams conceded that he has
himself used the “sleeper” terminology to describe persons arrested in the US but
now considers that Sageman is correct that Al Qaeda sent agents to conduct
operations within a planned time-frame, not to integrate into the community and
await further instructions at some later date.
[426] It is
understandable that the Service would have been concerned between 1999 and 2001
that Al Qaeda was employing methods similar to those used by foreign espionage
services when little was known about Al Qaeda and the jihadi phenomenon. And I
can appreciate that there may be differences of opinion on this among security
experts. But the SIR presented in 2008 simply recycled stale information
without attempting to offer a more balanced and nuanced view.
[427] Much
of what is contained in the summary relating to Al Qaeda and the Bin Laden
network is irrelevant, in my opinion, because it does not point to Almrei. For
example, paragraphs 22 and 23 address the use of the Internet for
communications between members of Al Qaeda and its followers and their use of
extremist websites for recruitment, indoctrination, fund raising and
propaganda. This is interesting but there is no evidence that Almrei used his
computer for these purposes. It did not materially assist the Court to be told
that other terrorist suspects have employed these methods when there was no
evidence to suggest that Almrei had done so. Both the RCMP and CSIS had the
opportunity to scrutinize the hard drive of his computer and there were other,
more intrusive, investigative methods available to them to investigate this
possibility.
[428] I
accept the evidence given by Mr. Young and Dr. Rudner, supported by the
reference documents, that terrorists employ false identification papers and
have need of sources who can provide reliable travel documents to allow them to
cross borders. This evidence was relevant to the question of whether Almrei had
the necessary skills to be of use to a terrorist organization. It supported the
Service's assessment that his own use of such documents and contacts in Bangkok and
Montréal was an important part of his "pedigree". Coupled with the
fact that he obtained a false passport and supporting documentation for Nabil
Almarabh in 2001, this was a key element of the case which justified his arrest
and detention following 9/11.
[429] Mr.
Young fairly conceded that some of Almrei’s contacts would have dried up after
more than seven years in detention. He thought that Almrei might still have
other undisclosed contacts that would be willing to deal with him. Indeed, that
is possible but I am sceptical that someone whose identity is now in security
databanks around the world and has testified that he disclosed what he knew in
an eight hour interview with the RCMP could reactivate those contacts.
Almrei’s Travel and Status in Canada:
[430] The
information in the SIR and the summary regarding Almrei's travels prior to and
in coming to Canada is largely based on his disclosures
subsequent to the 2001 certificate determination. This information reinforces
the fact that he misled Canadian officials about his background and lied when
directly asked about the countries to which he had traveled. As several of my
colleagues have previously observed, Almrei was economical with the truth when
provided with opportunities to explain where he had been and what he had done.
He has disclosed additional information only when it became apparent that the
authorities were aware of the facts. His credibility, therefore, is suspect.
[431] The
summary states that Almrei was not forthcoming about the honey business that he
engaged in both in Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. He
says that he found honey (and oud, an incense) less expensive in Pakistan and
imported some to Saudi Arabia where he had a small retail
business that he had started in high school. It was reported in the media in
2001 that members of Al Qaeda had used the honey business as a cover for the
shipment of explosives and money. The summary notes that there is no evidence
that Almrei did in fact use honey to conceal weapons or munitions or in order
to raise funds for extremist activities. He may have sent a portion of his
proceeds to Khattab in Chechnya. As noted above, counsel for the
Ministers took the position during the hearings that they did not expect me to
arrive at a conclusion other than that this information was merely speculative.
[432] As
stated by Mr. Young, Almrei's lies were a major factor in the Service's
assessment that he constitutes a threat to national security. But they began to
keep an eye on him in 1999 largely because of what they were told by a human
source about Almrei’s background and connections. I deal with that source’s
credibility in my closed reasons but the gist of what he told the Service in
1999 was at least partially corroborated by later information they received
including Almrei's own disclosures.
[433] Over
the course of the next two years, the Service collected information about
Almrei's statements and actions from human sources which, if credible, would
suggest that he was a committed Bin Laden supporter and participant in an
international false document network. The Service then drew certain inferences
from that information which, in my view, were not well-founded.
[434] Almrei
was under surveillance but there is no indication in the record of any
intention to take action against him until 9/11. He may have encountered
difficulties in obtaining the permanent resident status he had applied for and
steps may have been taken to revoke the refugee finding on the grounds of his
representation but he was not a candidate for a security certificate prior to
those attacks.
Almrei's
association with Osama Bin Laden and support for jihad
[435] At
paragraph 54, the summary states that Service information indicates that Almrei
shares bonds of kinship as well as faith with the Bin Laden network and has
demonstrated his support of Bin Laden, those associated with or sponsored by
him and his ideology. This is a reference to human source information dealt
with in the closed proceedings. The summary also relies on the information
Almrei disclosed in his solemn declaration of November 2002 that he had gone on
jihad in Afghanistan and Tajikistan, had received weapons training in the
use of the AK-47 assault rifle and had been in guest houses and camps under the
command of Sayyaf and Khattab.
[436] As
indicated above, I am satisfied that certain of the human sources relied upon
by the Service are not credible and that the information that they provided is
not reliable and appropriate within the meaning of the statute.
[437] I state
my findings about the sources in the closed set of reasons for judgment. My
conclusion about their credibility is based upon operational and source
management reports and the cross-examination of the Service witness conducted
by the Special Advocates in the closed hearings. Having considered all of the
information and evidence carefully, I am satisfied that certain of the human
sources in this case had motives to concoct stories that cast Almrei in a
negative light.
[438] Information
was provided by one source in September 2001 that is implausible given what is
known now about the chronology of events including Almrei's travels and Bin
Laden's movements. I accept that the Service did not have reason to doubt the
information at that time, although the source was then designated as being of
unknown reliability. However, when given a further opportunity in 2004 to
recount his knowledge of what Almrei had told him about his experiences in Afghanistan, the
source provided information which is consistent with Almrei's own evidence. The
source was highly motivated to curry favour with the Service in 2001. In
preparing the SIR, the Service chose to go with the 2001 account and ignored
what he said three years later.
[439] Almrei,
in common with many others, has made comments that were critical of US
policy towards the Middle East. He has freely acknowledged this. So long as he
lacked the intent to act upon those views in a violent manner, that does not
make him a security risk. The Ministers do not claim that he intended to commit
an act of violence.
[440] I
find Almrei’s evidence to be credible that prior to 9/11 he did not know much
about Bin Laden other than that he was a wealthy Saudi who had supported the
mujahedin during the anti-Soviet jihad and was then close to the Taliban.
Almrei was certainly aware of events in the Middle East at
that time but his primary interest was in Khattab and his role in the Chechnyan
insurgency.
[441] The
evidence does not provide reasonable grounds to believe that Almrei had any
association with Bin Laden or opportunity to meet apart from a brief period of
time when their presence in Afghanistan may
have coincided. There is no evidence that Bin Laden was at Beit al Ansar when
Almrei was there and the evidence does not indicate that Almrei later went to
any camps that Bin Laden controlled. Rather, he went to camps run by Sayyaf and
Khattab, neither of whom can be reasonably said to be part of Al Qaeda.
[442] Mr.
Quiggin and Dr. Williams testified that they did not see the indicators in
Almrei’s history that would suggest to them that he was Al Qaeda, such as
evidence that he had gone to Sudan between 1992 – 1996
when Bin Laden and his entourage were based there.
[443] The
main thrust of the Ministers' case during the public hearings was on Almrei’s
support for jihad, his experiences in Afghanistan and Tajikistan, contact with
Abdul Rasul Sayyaf and support for Ibn Khattab’s role in Chechnya. Almrei's
position is that his involvement in the Afghan jihad was supported at the time
by the Islamic establishment. He had minimal contact with Sayyaf, did not know
about the crimes attributed to Sayyaf's forces and was not himself directly
involved in any fighting. His stays at Sayyaf's and Khattab’s camps were in the
nature of rebat or garrison duty. He was trained in the use of an AK-47
but never had occasion to use it in combat.
[444] Almrei's
evidence about his time in Afghanistan is
consistent with Dr. Williams' evidence about the reality of the jihad
experience for most of the Arab Afghans. The label "Gucci Jihadi",
which Williams said was applied by the Afghans to some of the volunteers,
doesn't fit Almrei. He was not wealthy and he was not there as a tourist. He
was a young man seeking adventure and, possibly, a ticket to paradise. Almrei
went back and forth to his home in Saudi Arabia to
complete high school and later to attend to his business affairs. Eventually,
he had had enough adventure and wanted to get on with his life, as did the
great majority of Arab Afghan veterans. There is no reliable evidence that
while he was in Afghanistan he was indoctrinated by and
committed himself to Al Qaeda's vision of global jihad.
[445] Almrei
testified that while he had met Sayyaf, the mujahidin leader would have had
little, if any interest in him. Sayyaf was a major figure in Afghan politics.
Almrei was just one of the many young Arab volunteers who passed through his
guest houses and camps at that time. I accept Dr. Williams’ view that Sayyaf
maintained his camps primarily to protect his position in Afghanistan, not
to export terror. Some of those who passed through Sayyaf’s camps later joined
Al Qaeda.
[446] Almrei
volunteered the information that he had stayed at a guest house in Babhi
reserved for more important travelers. He explained how that came to be. The
Ministers rely on his stays there to suggest that Almrei enjoyed a greater
degree of intimacy with Sayyaf than that to which he has admitted. I am not
persuaded by that. It is simply implausible to believe, given everything that
has been presented in this case about Sayyaf, that he would have picked Almrei
out of the herd and indoctrinated him in the “web of hate and terrorism over
which Sayyaf presided” as the Ministers suggest.
[447] Had
Almrei stayed with Sayyaf for any significant length of time or attended the
university that Sayyaf ran at Babhi, an inference might have been drawn that he
was being trained for other purposes. But Almrei moved on to a camp where he
received basic training in the ubiquitous AK-47 and led prayers. On the second
trip he connected with Khattab. Almrei played ping-pong one evening with
Sayyaf . That was the extent of the relationship.
[448] There
is no doubt that Sayyaf is an ultra conservative Islamist with views on many
issues as extreme as those of the Taliban. In a September 2, 2004 editorial,
the New York Times described him as "a notorious warlord and savage
fundamentalist who in the 1980s and 1990s served as the chief mentor and
protector of Khalid Sheikh Muhammad, the Qaeda mastermind of the September 11
terrorist attacks" (T-114). Incredibly, the editorial noted, Sayyaf had
been a major beneficiary of the American-led invasion and was then one of the
country's leading power brokers whose endorsement was sought by all of the
presidential candidates including Hamid Karzai.
[449] Sayyaf’s
focus throughout his career has been on Afghan politics. It appears from the
evidence that he picked the sides that he fights on carefully to advance those
interests. By all accounts, he was the Saudi’s favourite war lord in Afghanistan
during the anti-Soviet jihad as he was one of the few who spoke Arabic
fluently. That may explain why he chose to go against Bin Laden and the Taliban
and to join with Massoud and the other members of the northern alliance and why
the US favoured him following the invasion.
[450] Sayyaf’s
actions speak louder than his words, as Williams and Quiggin stated. He could
not have been part of the Bin Laden network while he was actively trying to
kill Bin Laden and other members of Al Qaeda. It is also implausible that he
would have turned against his sponsors to support Bin Laden’s objective of
overturning the House of Saud. And I find it inconceivable that the US
would have done business with him if they had reason to suspect his involvement
or support of attacks on American personnel.
[451] Some
of those who went through Sayyaf's facilities near Peshawar and his camps in Afghanistan went
on to become part of Al Qaeda and its affiliated groups or associated
themselves with the Bin Laden philosophy and have committed terrorist acts
outside the region. These individuals made their own choices. If there was any
evidence that Sayyaf had sponsored or was otherwise linked to their actions, I
doubt that he would have remained free following the coalition invasion of Afghanistan or
would have been allowed to become a member of the new parliament and exert
influence over the Karzai government.
[452] There
is considerable evidence that Sayyaf’s forces committed war crimes or crimes
against humanity during the efforts to oust the Najibullah regime. Sayyaf is
quoted as having said that anyone remaining in Kabul was
a Najibullah supporter and deserved to die (Ex. A-3, T-6, p.16). His forces are
said to have attacked the minority Shi’ite, Hazara community with “unrestrained
fury beheading old men, women, children and dogs” during the ensuing civil war
(Ex. A-27, p.263). I agree with the Ministers that the respondent's contention
that Sayyaf's activities fall within the parameters of the armed conflict
exemption in the Criminal Code's definition of terrorism is untenable
with respect to those events. I do not agree that it would have no application
to all of Sayyaf's activities including his involvement in the anti-Soviet
jihad and the internal war against the Taliban. In any event, there is no
evidence or information before me that Almrei participated in any of the
attacks that could be characterized as war crimes or crimes against humanity.
[453] Mr.
Justice Russell Zinn cautioned about the risk of guilt by association in Abdelrazik
v. Canada (Minister of Foreign
Affairs), 2009 FC 580, [2009] F.C.J. No. 656. At paragraph 53 of his
reasons, Justice Zinn pointed out that a fundamental principle of justice is
that the accused does not have the burden of proving his innocence and that
proving the negative of an association with an extremist group can be extremely
difficult. In that case, the applicant was acquainted with at least one
confirmed terrorist, Ahmed Ressam, but there was no evidence that he himself
had ever committed such an act. In other proceedings, the Court has been
prepared to find that the named person’s involvement with terrorist networks
was substantiated on the evidence and went beyond mere “guilt by association”
reasoning: see for example, Mahjoub v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2006 FC 1503, [2006] F.C.J. No. 1862. In my view, Almrei
cannot be found to be a danger to national security or a member of a terrorist
organization due to his limited association with Sayyaf. If that were the case,
it would apply to much of the current Afghan Government including the
President.
[454] Among
Almrei’s communications intercepted following 9/11 is one in which he and his
caller expressed concern that the attacks were committed by Muslims or Arabs.
The closed information does not suggest in any way that Almrei knew or was expecting
these events. I don't believe, as the Ministers contend, that his testimony
suggests that he found the attacks objectionable simply because they involved
the suicide of the attackers, an act which is prohibited by the Koran. I accept
his evidence that he considers the attacks to be morally wrong and contrary to
the teachings of Islam because they involved the killing of innocents.
[455] The
summary states that in Federal Court proceedings in 2004 Almrei identified
photographs found on his computer during an RCMP search including photos of Bin
Laden and one of the 9/11 hijackers, Mohammad Atta (paragraph 55). These are
photographs of the sort that are downloaded to a computer when one visits news
websites. The evidence given in the prior proceedings was that Almrei followed
events on-line. A great many people would have had these photographs on their
computers following 9/11. The Ministers did not press this allegation during
the hearings and in their closing submissions and I have given it no weight. I mention
it only because the allegation remains on the public record.
Arab Afghan Connections:
[456] The
Ministers assert that Almrei is associated with Arab Afghans connected to the
Bin Laden network. It is clear from the evidence that Almrei took advantage of
his connections in the network of Arab Afghan veterans when he required
assistance to make his way to Canada, that he associated
with at least one veteran while in Canada and
that he aided another by procuring a false passport and contributing to his bail
bond. What is less clear is whether any of these individuals were part of the
Bin Laden network as described in the Public Summary and the Ministers'
evidence.
Ibn
Khattab
[457] There
is contradictory information in the record about Khattab and he remains a
shadowy figure in the history of the region. The weight of the evidence before
me in this case favours a finding that he was not a terrorist in his own right
or a terrorist patron but I accept that there are reasonable grounds to believe
the contrary. Khattab was a committed jihadist with a fundamentalist, Wahhabi
outlook on Islam and the world. His reasons for participating in jihad in Afghanistan were
the same as the other Afghan Arabs. With the fall of the Najibullah government,
he declined to become involved in the Afghans' internecine strife and looked
around for another place where he considered Muslims were oppressed. He found
it first in Tajikistan and then in Chechnya.
[458] Tajikistan was
under the control of a hard-line communist government which remained in office
with the support of the Russians when civil war broke out in May 1992.
Supporters of the opposition were forced to take refuge in northern Afghanistan
where they were protected by Ahmad Shah Masoud. Khattab allied himself with the
United Tajik Opposition (UTO) party, a coalition of democratic reformists and
Islamists led by Sayid Abdullah Nuri.
[459] Almrei
testified that he stayed in Khattab's house at the Tajik refugee camp in
Kunduz. During the Tajik civil war, Russian forces were deployed along the
border to repel infiltration from Afghanistan. The
UN negotiated a ceasefire in October, 1994 which led, to a peace agreement in
1997. I think that this may explain why Khattab moved on to Chechnya.
Almrei's evidence that he had traveled to the border region with Khattab to
scout Russian positions but they did not engage in fighting is, in my opinion,
credible as the cease fire would have been in place during the months he was in
the region.
[460] Khattab
was a warrior. He favoured frontal attacks on the Russians. The information
that he was directly involved in terrorist activities in Chechnya is
not, in my view, persuasive but there is some information to that effect. The
most troubling aspect regarding Khattab's sojourn in Chechnya is
his association with Basayef, against whom a stronger case can be made of
terrorism. There is also information that Khattab’s group may have engaged in
terrorist acts after his death. The information that Khattab condoned the
attacks on Americans in Saudi Arabia is credible as it would be
consistent with his personal mission to drive foreigners out of Muslim lands.
[461] The
information and evidence presented in this case does not in my opinion support
a finding that Khattab was a member of the Bin Laden network. They had likely
encountered each other during the anti-Soviet jihad but did not fight in the
same unit. Bin Laden may have contributed funds to Khattab in Chechnya and
some of Khattab's fighters moved on to join Al Qaeda. But Dr. Williams thought
that the number was very low. Khattab was unwilling to criticize Bin Laden but
the evidence does not indicate that he was prepared to support or join Bin
Laden's global jihad.
[462] Almrei's
association with Khattab was limited to a meeting in Babhi (Pabbi), a few trips
to Kunduz and forays to and across the Amu Darya
River into Tajikistan. He says that he took some food with him
on his later trips as it was scarce in the Tajik refugee camp at Kunduz and
that he obtained a grant from the Al Haramain Foundation in Ryadh to help the
Tajiks build a school for girls in the camp run by the UTO. He subsequently
followed Khattab's fortunes in Chechnya by long-distance from
Saudi Arabia and later Canada.
[463] The
Ministers regard the story about the girls school to be a complete contrivance
intended to appeal to Canadian sensibilities and to conceal the funding of
weapons and munitions and other supplies for Khattab. I was also sceptical of
Almrei's claim until I read a report by a human source that Almrei had told him
of this when he had described his experiences in Afghanistan. It
remains difficult for Western minds to accept that a charitable foundation
would write a check for roughly $35,000 to a young man who walked in off the
street with a story about building a school to aid refugees. Almrei says he had
a reference from an Islamic scholar in his hometown that was sufficient
evidence of his bona fides for the foundation. I note that while some of
the Al Haramain foundation offices have been listed for supporting terrorism,
the Riyadh office was not included. There is
evidence that Khattab was supported by many Saudis. Dr. Williams said he was
considered to be a hero and was publicly mourned in Saudi
Arabia, including by the Royal family, when he was killed by the
Russians in 2002.
[464] Almrei
admired Khattab and supported his actions in Tajikistan and Chechnya.
They were from the same city in south-eastern Saudi Arabia,
Damman, and just a few years apart in age. But Khattab was a leader and a
warrior. Almrei was content to go where others suggested and, if his evidence
is to be believed, did no fighting at all. His association with Khattab does
not, in my opinion, support a finding that he is a danger to the security of Canada.
Nabil
Almarabh
[465] Nabil
Almarabh is a Syrian national who originally went to the United
States in 1989 and remained there until 1991. He then went to
Pakistan and Afghanistan with the support of the
World Muslim League. Almrei met Nabil Almarabh at Kunduz. He knew Almarabh
then by his kunya or respect name. Almarabh returned to the US in
1993. He was denied refugee status in Canada and
deported to the US in 1995. He worked as a taxi driver in Boston at the same
firm that employed Raeed Hijazi, later convicted in Jordan in
relation to a terrorist plot. Almarabh returned to Canada in
2001 where he met Almrei at his uncle's Ahmed Shehab’s print shop in Toronto.
[466] Almarabh
asked for Almrei's help in obtaining a passport, ostensibly to visit his mother
in Jordan. Almrei contacted a person he knew in
Montréal and obtained a passport and other identity documents for Almarabh and
pocketed a fee for the service. When Almarabh was caught attempting to enter
the United States and returned to Canada where he was detained, Almrei
contributed to the cash bond that Almarabh's uncle posted to get him released.
Almarabh then arranged to have himself smuggled back into the United
States in July 2001. He was convicted in Boston of
an assault causing bodily harm, fined and placed on probation. Following 9/11,
he was arrested by the FBI in Chicago on a material witness
warrant at the grocery store where he was working. He had a substantial amount
of cash in his possession and amber jewellery which he said was the proceeds of
the sale of his share of his uncles' shop.
[467] In
July 2002, Almarabh pled guilty to charges of entering the country illegally
and was sentenced to time served. He was deported to Syria in
January, 2004. It seems as he escaped the attention of the Syrian authorities
until sometime later when he registered for military service. A report from a
human rights organization indicated that he remained in detention in 2008.
[468] The
public summary cites a number of media reports for information that Almarabh
was linked to several of the 9/11 hijackers, was involved in money transfers
that may have helped finance the 9/11 attacks, and was linked to an
international forgery ring in which participants collected and traded passports
and drivers licenses. In one newspaper report from 2004, a US
immigration judge is said to have found that Almarabh presented a danger to
national security, was credibly linked to elements of terrorism and had a
propensity to lie.
[469] The
Court had the benefit of additional information in the closed proceedings. I am
satisfied on the basis of that information that the more alarming media reports
about Almarabh were not substantiated by the F.B.I, US Attorney' s Office and
US District Court which dealt with his case. Nonetheless, it is clear that
Almarabh was prepared to violate US and Canadian law whenever it suited him and
that Almrei was willing to aid him in that regard.
Ahmed Al
Kaysee
[470] Ahmed
Al Kaysee was also a veteran of the jihad in Afghanistan.
Almrei says that he obtained his name from someone in Pakistan and called him
prior to coming to Canada. Al Kaysee had become a Canadian citizen
and was preaching as an Imam at a Toronto
mosque. Al Kaysee met Almrei at the Toronto
airport and helped him get settled. They remained friends until sometime after
Almrei was detained. He initially tried to help Almrei by raising funds for
legal fees. They are no longer close and Al Kaysee declined to assist in the
latest proceedings.
Hisham Al Taha
[471] When
Almrei first applied to come to Canada in
1998, he said he intended to visit Al Taha in Richmond,
B.C. In his testimony, Almrei says he was also given Al Taha’s name by his
contact in Pakistan. Al Taha agreed to let him use his name
when Almrei called, although the two had never met. He later denied speaking to
Almrei and refused to assist him in the legal proceedings.
Involvement
in False Documentation:
[472] Almrei
has admitted knowing people in Montréal who could obtain false documents and
that he had a reputation in the community for being able to do this. He has
admitted that he traveled to Thailand in 1998 and met an individual who was
involved in human smuggling and document procurement and that he contacted that
person on several occasions after coming to Canada. He
has admitted arranging a marriage of convenience between his employee and
Ibrahim Ishak, that he provided a fraudulent reference letter for Ishak and
that the two of them were involved in a scheme for obtaining Michigan and Ontario
drivers licenses.
[473] This
information supports the finding that Almrei was prepared to and did engage in
criminal activity. It does not, in my opinion, point to a conclusion that he is
a national security risk.
[474] The
public summary notes that Ishak was detained by US authorities at the Detroit
airport en route from Bosnia and had in his possession 13 packages of
identity and other documents including passports. Almrei has denied knowing
anything about these documents. Information from the Charkaoui II disclosure
was considered in the closed proceedings regarding this matter. I am satisfied
that there is no information to suggest that Almrei was involved or that Ishak
was doing anything nefarious with those documents. Ishak was operating an
immigration consultancy at that time. One of the sets of documents related to
his fiancée whom he wished to help emigrate to Canada at
that time, while still married to Almrei’s employee. The information as a whole
indicates that Ishak was involved in fraudulent activity but not terrorism.
[475] The public summary
states that Almrei and five other individuals gained access to a restricted
area at Pearson International Airport on September
17, 1999. Security officials were said to be probing a number of missing
clearance and security passes for the most sensitive areas of the airport.
These alarming statements are coupled with other information that a number of
photographs were found on Almrei's computer during an RCMP search including a
security badge, passport photo and the cockpit of an airplane.
[476] This was the only new
allegation against Almrei in the 2008 SIR and public summary. Airports are an
obvious target for terrorist acts. When Mr. Young testified, he had not read
the RCMP report which resulted from the Force’s investigation of the incident.
That report was obtained during the hearing.
[477] Almrei and the other men
were observed washing planes and restocking supplies for a company that had a
contract to service aircraft. Almrei was seen using a magnetic security pass to
gain access to the hangar. It was later determined that he did not have a pass
issued by the airport authority but Ishak did. Ishak’s pass was subsequently
suspended by Transport Canada. The RCMP investigation
concluded that the men were merely engaged in cleaning and restocking the
aircraft.
[478] But
apart from the evidence that he had acquired such documents for his own use and
procured them for Almarabh, the information presented to the Court did not
support a finding that he was a member of a false document network.
Security
Consciousness and Use of Clandestine Methodology:
[479] The
public summary says nothing more than that Almrei has demonstrated concern for
his security and an understanding of security procedures. It states that he was
aware that his activities might be of interest to the authorities. This refers
to information which was considered in the closed proceedings. I have addressed
these matters in my private reasons for judgment.
Should the Certificate be
Stayed as an Abuse of the Court’s Process?
[480] In
closing argument, the respondent submitted that the certificate should be
stayed as an abuse of process because:
a.
he had been denied an opportunity to know and meet the case
against him and this deficiency had not been cured by the presence of the
Special Advocates;
b.
the Ministers had destroyed evidence which was required by
the Special Advocates to determine the reliability of information and because
the Ministers rely on unreliable evidence;
c.
the Government of Canada chose to use the security
certificate procedure with all of its limitations on the rights of the
respondent in lieu of an appropriate alternate procedure, namely criminal
charges related to his admitted role in procuring a false Canadian passport;
and because
d.
the Ministers breached their duty of candour to the Court.
[481] The
Special Advocates filed a related motion in the closed proceedings seeking to
have the Certificate quashed on the ground that the Ministers and the Service
breached their duties
of candour. Their submissions were, in brief, that the SIR and Public Summary
were prepared, and evidence and other information was presented to the Court
during the evidentiary portion of this proceeding in a manner that failed to
disclose material exculpatory evidence and other information that was in the
possession of the Service and was only disclosed through the Charkaoui II
disclosure. I have addressed that motion in my private decision and my findings
in respect to the specific examples of material non-disclosure alleged have
also been taken into consideration in arriving at a decision on the merits of
the certificate.
[482] In
considering whether proceedings constitute an abuse of the court's process, the
test is that set out in Blencoe v. B.C. Human Rights Commission, [2000]
2 S.C.R. 307, [2000] S.C.J. No. 43, at paragraph 121. The court must be
satisfied that the damage to the public interest in the fairness of the administrative
process should the proceeding go ahead would exceed the harm to the public
interest in the enforcement of the legislation if the proceedings were halted.
The proceedings must be unfair to the point that they are contrary to the
interests of justice or will undermine the integrity of the judicial process: Canada v. Tobias, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 391,
[1997] S.C.J. No. 82. Such cases will be extremely rare.
[483] The
respondent submits that the test is satisfied by the cumulative effect of the
identified concerns even if one or more would be insufficient.
Lack of
Disclosure/Inability to Meet the Case
[484] The
first of the abuse of process grounds raised by the respondent is associated
with his broad Charter based challenge to the legislative scheme. As I
indicated above, I do not consider it necessary to address that challenge in
this case in view of the conclusions I have reached on the evidence. I think it
important to comment, however, on the respondent’s argument that he was denied
procedural fairness because of the lack of full disclosure. It is my view that
the essential elements of the government's allegations against Mr. Almrei were
disclosed to him in these and the prior proceedings. Based on his testimony and
the submissions made on his behalf, Mr. Almrei was clearly aware of the
Ministers’ allegations against him. He was not given full disclosure of all of
the closed information that supported the Ministers’ case, such as human source
reports, but that was unavoidable in the circumstances.
[485] In
support of this argument, the respondent relies on recent decisions of the
European Court of Human Rights and the courts of the United Kingdom: Secretary
of State v. M.B., [2007] UKHL 46 [“SSHD v. MB”]; A. and Others v.
the United Kingdom, Application 3455-05, and ECHR Feb.19, 2009; Secretary
of State for the Home Department v. AF and others, [2009] UKHL 28 [“SSHD
v. AF”].
[486] In SSHD
v. M.B., above, at paragraph 35, Lord Bingham commented on the
"grave disadvantages" of the person affected not been aware of the case
against him. He noted that the reason is obvious:
In any ordinary case,
the client instructs his advocate what his defence is to the charges made
against him, briefs the advocate on the weaknesses and vulnerability of the
adverse witnesses, and indicates what evidence is available by way of
rebuttal. This is a process which may be impossible to adopt if the control
person does not know the allegations made against him and cannot therefore give
meaningful instructions, and the special advocate, once he knows what the
allegations are, cannot tell the controlled person or seek instructions without
permission, which in practice (as I understand) is not given.
[487]
As counsel for the respondent fairly acknowledged, the
practice in Canada in security certificate cases is not the
same as that which applies in control order proceedings in the United
Kingdom. In certain of the UK
cases, details of the allegations against the affected individual have been
wholly or largely withheld because of national security concerns. The public
allegations may be so general as to preclude a cogent defence: SSHD v. AF,
above at paragraph 63 to 65. The individual is not provided with an extensive
summary of the closed case, as is the practise here, and the Court lacks the
discretion to direct the disclosure of additional information in order to
ensure that the subject of the process is reasonably informed of the Minister’s
case, subject to withdrawal of the information by the Minister. Thus the issue
in the UK cases, which has now been resolved, has been whether there
is a “irreducible core minimum of information” that must be provided to ensure
a fair hearing. The amount of information provided in the Canadian certificate
cases is far above that level.
[488] In
this case, most of the information relied upon by the Ministers that was not
disclosed to the respondent consisted of reports from human sources. To
disclose the information would have lead to the identification of the sources.
In SSHD v. AF at paragraphs 65 and 66, the House of Lords, applying the
decision of the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights in A. v.
the United Kingdom, above, accepted the principle that it may be acceptable
not to disclose the source of evidence so long
as counterbalancing procedures ensured that the party was accorded “a
substantial measure of procedural justice.”
[489] This
is essentially the same conclusion as that reached by the Supreme Court of
Canada in Charkaoui 1 in 2007. The individual must be provided with full
disclosure or a “substantial substitute” to full disclosure. In my view,
Parliament’s effort to craft a suitable alternative was successful in this case
for two reasons. The first is that the respondent was provided with a
sufficient understanding of the allegations that were made against him in the
SIR through the public summary and the further information that was ordered
disclosed. The second is that the Special Advocates very effectively performed
the roles for which they were given a statutory mandate: to protect the
interests of the respondent in the closed proceedings; to question the
withholding of information; and to challenge the relevance, reliability and
appropriateness of the non-disclosed information and other evidence relied upon
by the Ministers.
Destruction of
Evidence
[490] This
concern is founded upon the fact that during the time of the investigation of
the respondent, CSIS's policy was to destroy primary source material. This is
the issue that was addressed by the Supreme Court of Canada in Charkaoui II.
The Supreme Court did not rule on the respondent’s abuse of process application
in that case, holding that it was for the court of first instance to review the
evidentiary record and make the determination.
[491] The
respondent's argument on this question is framed primarily in the context of
the destruction of electronic surveillance information. As discussed above,
this is not a case which turned on the significance of electronic intercepts.
Accordingly, the failure to keep original recordings of all of the intercepts
conducted did not, in my view, have a material effect on the outcome of the
case. In any event, I found that a summary of the intercept reports would be
sufficient to provide reasonable disclosure to the respondent.
[492] The
destruction of original interview notes by source handlers was also not an
issue of major concern in this case because of the contemporaneous reports
which they had prepared. I did not consider it necessary to call any of the
handlers as witnessed to be examined and cross-examined on the accuracy of
those reports. In the circumstances and given the volume of material that the
Court and Special Advocates had to review, I doubt that it would have proven
effective to proceed in that manner. That is not to say that it could not be important
in a certificate case if a significant issue arose as to whether a statement
attributed to a source was reported accurately.
Choice of
Procedure
[493] The
respondent submits that had he been charged under the Criminal Code with
offences related to the passport he procured for Nabil Almarabh, he would have
been entitled to all of the procedural due process rights available in the
criminal justice system. The decision to proceed under the security certificate
procedure with its inherent limitations has deprived him of the full enjoyment
of those rights.
[494] The
Court may have encouraged this argument by questions posed to the government
witnesses during the detention review proceedings. At first impression, it had
occurred to me that Almrei could have been charged under the Code and, if
convicted, steps could have been taken to reopen the refugee determination and
remove him from Canada. I asked the Service and CBSA witnesses
why that was not done and they were unable to answer.
[495] The
security certificate procedure, although intended by Parliament to be more
expedient, results in a label being attached to the named person which may
complicate removal procedures. In Almrei’s case, the immigration authorities
contributed to that label by informing the Syrian Embassy in Ottawa that
he was a terrorist suspect when they requested a travel document for him after
the first Certificate was upheld. That had the effect of alerting the Syrians
to Mr. Almrei’s alleged pedigree and association with Al Qaeda. Syria is
one of the Middle Eastern countries that Al Qaeda theorists, such as the Syrian
Abu Musab Al Suri, consider corrupt and apostate.
[496] What
the government knew and could prove in the fall of 2001 are, of course, two
different things. The information about Almarabh and the passport was
intelligence that could not have been introduced as evidence in a criminal
proceeding without compromising the sources. Almarabh was a material witness in
the hands of the FBI and unlikely to be made available to testify.
[497] In
any event, the choice of procedure against a suspect, whether criminal or
administrative, is entirely a matter for the Executive. There is no right to be
charged with a criminal offence when Parliament has provided an alternative
procedure to achieve the objective of protecting national security and the
safety of Canadians. It is not an abuse of the Court’s process to make use of
that procedure.
Breach of the
Duty of Candour
[498] The
Supreme Court has emphasized that a party before the Court on an ex parte
basis is under a duty of utmost good faith: Ruby v. Canada
(Solicitor General), [2002] 4 S.C.R. 3, [2002] S.C.J. No. 73, at para. 27.
This is particularly true in the area of national security law characterized by
in camera hearings and ex parte representations made by the
government. The evidence presented must be complete and thorough and no
relevant information adverse to the interest of that party may be withheld: Ruby,
above, at para. 47.
[499] The
application of this duty in security certificate proceedings prior to Bill C-3
was recognized by the Federal Court of Appeal in Charkaoui v. Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration et al., 2006 FCA 206, [2006] F.C.J. No. 868, at para.
18. In my view, the enactment of Bill C-3 has not altered the duty owed to the
Court by the Service and the Ministers. Proceedings continued to be conducted
in closed sessions and they remain ex parte in the sense that the
respondent and his counsel are not present. The presence of the Special
Advocates and their ability to receive the same information that is now
disclosed to the Court, pursuant to Charkaoui II, does not alter that
fact.
[500] The duties of utmost
good faith and candour imply that the party relying upon the presentation of ex
parte evidence will conduct a thorough review of the information in its
possession and make representations based on all of the information including
that which is unfavourable to their case. That was not done in this instance.
The 2008 SIR was assembled with information that could only be construed as unfavourable
to Almrei without any serious attempt to include information to the contrary,
or to update their assessment. As Mr. Young observed, in an unguarded moment,
they thought that they had done their job in 2001 and there was no need to
continue the investigation.
[501] The
Ministers submit that the failure to consider information that casts the
Service’s opinion in a different light should not undermine the legitimacy or
fairness of the proceeding as long as that information has been made available
in the course of the reasonableness hearing. Indeed, the Ministers assert in their
closing reply submissions, at paragraph 15, that there is no requirement that
the SIR advance a case against a finding of inadmissibility. The SIR, in other
words, is merely a document crafted by CSIS to plead their case and does not
need to present the contradictory information within their possession. In my
view, that is clearly incompatible with the duties of good faith and candour
which the Court expects from the Service and the Ministers.
[502] In
this case, information that was inconsistent with that presented to the Court
through the SIR only came to light when it was ordered produced in conformity
with the Service’s Charkaoui II obligations. This included surveillance
and intercept reports that contradicted human source reports on which the
Service and the Ministers relied. Information that was inconsistent with the
content of the Source Exhibit was only disclosed when the Court began to order
the production of information from the human source management files. The Charkaoui
II disclosure obligation does not absolve the Service from the
responsibility to fairly consider and present the information in their
possession when they prepare the SIR. Nor does it absolve the Ministers from
the responsibility to ensure that the information and evidence filed in support
of the certificate is complete, thorough and fairly presented.
[503] I
find, therefore, that the Service and the Ministers were in breach of their
duty of candour to the Court. As for a remedy, a determination of the
reasonableness of the certificate based on the Court's assessment of all of the
information and evidence presented in this case is the most appropriate course
of action at this stage of the proceedings.
CONCLUSION
[504] Having
considered all of the information and other evidence presented to the Court, I
am satisfied that Hassan Almrei has not engaged in terrorism and is not and was
not a member of an organization that there are reasonable grounds to believe
has, does or will engage in terrorism. I find that there are no reasonable
grounds to believe that Hassan Almrei is to-day, a danger to the security of Canada.
Thus, I find that none of the grounds of inadmissibility in subsection 34(1) of
the Act have been made out and, accordingly, I find that the certificate is not
reasonable and must be quashed.
[505] In
arriving at this conclusion, I am taking into consideration that Hassan Almrei
lied and engaged in criminal activities prior to and following his entry to Canada. He
maintained contacts with other Afghan Arab veterans, associated with persons
who were believed to be Islamic extremists and made contact with others who
were involved in human smuggling and the false document trade. He was prepared
to assist others in obtaining those services and himself procured a false
passport and other travel documents. As I said at the outset of these reasons,
I would have had no difficulty upholding the certificate in 2001 on the grounds
that he constituted a danger to the security of Canada and that there were
reasonable grounds to believe then that he was a member of a terrorist
organization, on the information available to the Court at that time. Almrei
did not lead evidence to contest those findings and the information presented in
camera was not challenged as it has been in these proceedings.
[506] The
Hassan Almrei of 2001 is not the same person that I heard and observed in the
courtroom. As he acknowledged in his testimony, he has been changed by the
experience, by the people who have befriended and supported him in the years in
which he was in custody and through the reading he has done on a broad range of
subjects. One constant in his life over the course of the past eight years has
been his religious devotion. I do not believe that he will now proceed to
violate the principles of his faith.
[507] I am
also persuaded by the evidence that if he is the person that the Ministers
believe him to be, it is unlikely that after such a prolonged period of
detention that he could re-enter the life that he had and reactivate his
contacts in the false document trade. Given the notoriety that he has acquired,
that would be foolhardy for him and for anyone inclined to do business with
him.
[508] I
note that CSIS, in their most recent assessment of Mr. Almrei, considers that
the risk that he poses a threat to the security of Canada, if
released without conditions, was reduced as a result of a number of factors.
They had no new information to indicate that he was engaged in threat-related
activities, his original network of contacts has been disrupted and his high
public profile and lack of anonymity would render him less effective.
[509] The
Service's assessment in the February 2008 SIR was prepared, in my view, without
sufficient consideration of all of the information within its possession and
without considering whether the state of knowledge about the risks to national
security posed by Islamist extremists had evolved since Almrei was detained in
2001. That task fell on the Court with the assistance of counsel for both
parties and the Special Advocates.
Certified Questions
[510] In accordance with section 79 of IRPA, no appeal may be made to the
Federal Court of Appeal from this decision unless this Court certifies that a
serious question of general importance is involved in the determination which
has been made in the case and states the question for the purposes of appeal.
[511] The
Ministers have proposed a number of questions for consideration. The respondent is
opposed to the certification of any question on the ground that should he have
succeeded on the factual merits of the case against him, it would be unfair to
subject him to a possibly long drawn-out appellate process after he has spent
over seven years in custody.
[512] In light of the findings
that I have made and the length of these reasons, I think it appropriate to
allow the parties some time to consider whether they wish to re-submit or
withdraw their proposed questions or submit new questions. Accordingly, a
formal order will not issue immediately and I will make myself available to
discuss the matter in conference with counsel at a convenient date and time.
[513] I
wish to express my appreciation to all of the counsel who took part in these
proceedings, including those who moved on to other matters along the way, for
their diligence, thoughtfulness, courtesy and good humour which made my task
much easier.
“Richard G. Mosley”