Controversy in Canada over resident’s alleged Palestinian terrorism ties
The status of a man living in Canada alleged to be a senior member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine terrorist organization has become the topic of concern for the Canadian Jewish community and the subject of debate in the Canadian senate after an expose by The National Post.
Khalid Barakat, who resides in Vancouver, has been named by Israeli intelligence services as a leader of PFLP, The Post’s Terry Glavin reported. Barakat has also been described as such by Palestinian news outlets, and at times, the PFLP website. Supporters assert that he is a malaligned Palestinian rights activist.
“Khalid Barakat has been barred from the United States, he has been barred from Germany, yet the Trudeau government still allows this individual to remain in Canada, despite a Canadian law that forbids any individual with connections to terrorist organizations from entering our country or receiving Canadian Citizenship,” said Senator Leo Housakos in a debate with Senator Marc Gold, the representative of the Government in the Senate. “Why does your government allow him to remain in the country?”
According to Glavin, Barakat has been banned from Germany.
“I’m very aware of the person you described, and the story that appeared in the press,” said Gold, who is Jewish and heavily involved in Jewish and Israeli Canadian affairs. “I cannot comment on specific cases such as the one you identified. But everyone who may be ordered to be removed remains entitled under our system of justice to due process before the law and are subject to many levels of review and appeal.”
“I’m aware of this individual, you’re aware of this individual, I think it is high time that we make the government aware of the inherent dangers of this individual,” said Housakos, a member of the Conservative Party opposition. “Bnai Brith Canada has been raising this issue with your government for some time. They’ve provided intelligence about Barakat’s whereabouts in Canada as well as his involvement with this designated terrorist organization. While in Canada, Barakat has published articles in which he calls for targeted terrorist attacks to be carried out against Israel and other Zionist targets beyond the Middle East. ”
“We have provided the Government with credible and convincing information, yet we have had no response,” said chief executive officer of Bnai Brith Canada Michael Mostyn said in a statement following the senate discussion. “The recent National Post story has made the situation even more critical and more alarming. “The government needs to act immediately and deport Khaled Barakat.”
“How is the Jewish community in Canada supposed to take seriously your government’s claim to be committed to fighting antisemitism if it allows this man to remain in Canada?” Housakos continued. “Will your government do the right thing and order Barakat out of Canada? It’s not right, we have laws, individuals of this nature should not be admitted into our country.”
Gold assured the public that the government takes the issue of antisemitism and allegations of this kind seriously.
The National Post also highlighted Barakat’s connection to the NGO Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, which is listed by Israel as an affiliate of the PFLP.
Despite the ostensible connections to the PFLP, Samidoun is a registered not-for-profit corporation in Canada. Barakat’s wife is listed as one of Samidoun’s Canadian directors, Glavin reported, but Samidoun insisted that Barakat was not a member.
Following the expose, Samidoun released a statement saying that it “condemns in the strongest terms the smear campaign targeting Palestinian Canadian leftist writer and community organizer Khaled Barakat as well as the work of Samidoun, by the right-wing National Post, intentionally forwarding the agenda of pro-Israel lobby organizations in Canada.”
“The links between the PFLP, a listed terrorist entity in Canada, and Samidoun are clear,” said the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs (CIJA). “We reiterate our calls for Public Safety Canada to list Samidoun as a terrorist entity.”
“Samidoun also needs to be decertified as a corporation immediately, and it should never have been certified in the first place,” said Mostyn.
Glavin reported that Samidoun’s partner organization in France, the Collectif Palestine Vaincra (CPV), was disbanded by government decree.
Samidoun was affiliated with the April 25 rally in Toronto in which protestors cheered breaking news of rocket attacks on Israel and praised the deadly terrorism wave that recently gripped the Jewish state. Speakers aspired to destroy the state and claimed that Jews had no connection to the Temple Mount.
PFLP is a Marxist Palestinian terrorist organization founded in 1967. Notable members include Rasmea Odeh and Leila Khaled. In October, several NGOs besides Samidoun were listed as affiliates of the organization. The National Post noted that a 2014 terrorist attack in Jerusalem killed a Toronto-born rabbi, Howie Rothman.
Source: JP