You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Great White North
Crown calls for video monitoring of terrorism suspect
2007-10-30
Canadian officials are taking the unprecedented step of asking a judge to install closed-circuit video cameras inside a terrorism suspect's family home, arguing national security necessitates the scrutiny. Crown lawyer Donald MacIntosh said in an interview yesterday he hopes the Federal Court will approve the heightened surveillance, though he knows of no jurisdiction that has tried it. Having raised the proposal orally last week, he said he intends to submit a formal argument before a hearing next month.

Lawyers acting for Mahmoud Jaballah, an Egyptian asylum-seeker who already lives under extremely strict house arrest, are resisting added surveillance and fighting for increased liberties. In fact, the Federal Court is currently weighing his proposal that he be let out of his Toronto home to teach school lessons to Muslim children.

Canadian officials accuse Mr. Jaballah of playing a "communications relay" role in a major terrorist massacre - al-Qaeda's 1998 African embassy bombings. His potential access to fax machines, computers and telephones inside his family home, where he lives with his wife and five children, deeply worries the government.

Mr. Jaballah, who was never charged with a criminal offence, spent nearly all of 1999 to 2007 in jail. Attempts to deport him to Egypt, a country known to torture fundamentalists, failed on humanitarian grounds. Like four other alleged al-Qaeda-affiliated foreigners held under controversial "security certificate" powers, he has recently agreed to live under extraordinary surveillance, in return for being let out of jail.

Past measures have included the suspects submitting to being followed by federal agents during their few weekly excursions, having their calls monitored, staying away from computers and having video cameras installed - but outside the home. Never before has any Canadian prisoner on bail been known to have had to countenance cameras inside the household.

Mr. Jaballah's main sureties, who are to ensure he lives up to his conditions, are his 22-year-old son, who is a student, and his wife, the acting principal of a Toronto Islamic school. Mr. Jaballah, who co-founded the school, hopes to resume teaching there. His wife said in an interview that Mr. Jaballah would teach math and sciences; his son said his father would teach Arabic. Crown lawyers are fighting the proposal to let Mr. Jaballah teach. "The school, parents, and children would need to be informed that the applicant is a national security risk," writes a government official in court documents.

When Madam Justice Carolyn Layden-Stevenson ordered Mr. Jaballah freed last spring, she stated she did so with great reservations concerning Ms. Al-Mashtouli who "previously lied to the court" about her husband's history. The judge expressed higher hopes that the 22-year-old Ahmad Jaballah could watch his dad. Yesterday, he said the government's plan was unnecessary. "There is no reason to install cameras or video-conferencing equipment, it's just ridiculous," he said. "...My mom she wears a veil; being at home, if there's a camera, it restricts her movement."

Officials have expressed concern the family has, on certain occasions, failed to lock up a laptop or fax machine that Mr. Jaballah could use.

Judge Layden-Stevenson has ruled that there "are reasonable grounds to believe that Mr. Jaballah was a senior member of [Egyptian al-Jihad] who acted as a communicator among terrorist cells." She said late-1990s records have never been adequately explained: "Although provided with the opportunity to address the 72 calls to Yemen, the 47 calls to Azerbaijan, the 75 calls to London, England [to an alleged al-Qaeda front] ... and the 20 calls to the United Kingdom, Yemen, Azerbaijan, and Pakistan within a two-day time frame, Mr. Jaballah either failed to do so or was evasive."
Posted by:ryuge

#6  Mahmoud Jaballah, an Egyptian asylum-seeker

Fer phuque's sake, he's not even a citizen! Slingshot his sorry terrorist ass back to Egypt where they can "interrogate" this worthless sack of shit 24/7/365.
Posted by: Zenster   2007-10-30 15:13  

#5  Set three cameras he knows about, and a dozen he doesn't. Smoke alarms are good disguise.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2007-10-30 12:20  

#4  I remarked in another thread last week that these "Security Certificates" are a thing that NO Canadian government will ever give up. They give the government virtually unlimited power over any individual that they get in their sights. Watch out! When we Canadians get upset enough we turn more N@zi-like than Adolph and his crew ever were. But we're really nice and polite about it.
Posted by: Canuckistan sniper   2007-10-30 12:11  

#3  Send him to Kenya. I'm sure families of the 200 dead or the 5000 wounded would like to have a panga word with him.
Posted by: ed   2007-10-30 11:51  

#2  "Never before has any Canadian prisoner on bail been known to have had to countenance cameras inside the household."

WhoaaÂ…this has Reality show hit written all over it. Sign his kids up for hockey lessons, assign him a Jewish public defender; then add a couple of Mounties as security guards. Then sit back and watch the hilarity ensue.
Posted by: DepotGuy   2007-10-30 11:43  

#1  This is beneath fisking. Shoot him.
Posted by: Excalibur   2007-10-30 08:57  

00:00