John Maguire, an ISIS fighter from Ottawa, appears on video warning Canada

Jacques

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After what happened recently in Ottawa, here's the next step of manipulation:

_http://news.nationalpost.com/2014/12/07/john-maguire-an-isis-fighter-from-ottawa-appears-on-video-warning-canada-of-attacks-where-it-hurts-you-the-most/

A Muslim convert who left Ottawa last year to join ISIS resurfaced in a propaganda video on Sunday to threaten Canadians they will be “indiscriminately targeted” in retaliation for joining the international military coalition fighting the terror group.

In a six-minute video, he said the October killings of two Canadian Forces members in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Que., and Ottawa by men who had adopted Islamist extremist beliefs were a “direct response” to Canada’s role in Iraq.

“The more bombs you drop on our people, the more Muslims will realize and understand that today, waging jihad against the West and its allies around the world is beyond a shadow of the doubt a religious obligation binding upon every Muslim,” he said
 
"here's the next step of manipulation"

Came across a recent article involving Canadian ISIS conscripts - these weary-eyed jihadi expats returning home. After reading the article, one should be asking a lot of questions, yet they don't; the journalists especially. Comments at the end:

Young Canadian ISIS recruit says he saw violence on scale he could never have imagined


http://www.cbc.ca/news/isis-canadian-recruit-returns-1.4281860
By Nazim Baksh, John Lancaster

In early 2014, a young Toronto-area man who went by the jihadi nom de guerre "Abu Huzaifa al-Kanadi" (Abu Huzaifa the Canadian) cleaned out his bank account and left to join the ranks of ISIS.

He was 17 going on 18. His parents were kept in the dark about his intention to join the extremist organization, he said.

Five months after serving as an ISIS enforcer in the Syrian city of Manbij, Abu Huzaifa said he realized it wasn't what he had signed up for and he decided to flee Islamic State in Iraq and Syria [ISIS] and head home.

Abu Huzaifa would only agree to speak to the CBC on condition that his real name and identity not be revealed. Afraid for his life, he said he suffers from nightmares and wakes up in a cold sweat at least three times a week.

For the past year, he has been counselled by Mubin Shaikh, the CSIS and RCMP undercover agent who helped break up the so-called Toronto 18 cell that plotted bombings in the city.

Abu Huzaifa said CSIS and RCMP agents have questioned him extensively since his return to Canada, but that he has not been charged.
In a written statement, CSIS said it is aware of approximately 60 "extremist travellers" who have returned to Canada as of the end of August.

The spy agency described "extremist travellers" as individuals who are suspected of travelling abroad to engage in terrorism-related activity and who "pose a range of security concerns for Canada."

Many have not been charged, but RCMP and CSIS do not comment on individual cases.

Abu Huzaifa said he was studying at a madrassa, an Islamic religious school, in Pakistan in 2013 where religious leaders were openly preaching that it was an obligation to perform jihad to liberate Muslims from oppression.

"I felt it was my duty, because you could see the Syrian regime becoming godlike to its people," he said. "They were oppressing the Sunni population, killing families, killing children."

He told his parents he was going to Turkey for a semester abroad and booked a flight from Lahore to Istanbul, travelling on his Pakistani passport.

On arrival, he was met by a contact with the help of a former Mississauga resident, Mohammed Ali, also known as Abu Turaab al-Kanadi.
Ali, a former Ryerson student, joined ISIS in early 2013 and was notorious on social media for heaping praise on ISIS and encouraging others to sign up.

His contact took Abu Huzaifa to the Turkish-Syrian border town of Jarablus, and from there he crossed into Syria at night.

Enforcer with ISIS police

Abu Huzaifa registered with ISIS and entered the ISIS controlled city of Manbij, a city northeast of Aleppo with a population of 100,000. He said he was trained for a few weeks in the use of weapons and assigned to Al-Hisba, a quasi-police force tasked with enforcing Shariah law.

He used several hundred dollars of his own savings to purchase a rifle, a Glock pistol, ISIS military uniform and tactical gear embroidered with ISIS insignia. He said the items were openly sold at shops in Manbij.

"We would enforce dress codes, ensure people don't smoke, use alcohol or drugs and that men and women didn't mix," he told CBC.

He said his unit would enforce ISIS school curriculum and manage its local prison.

Meeting other westerners


Abu Huzaifa said he was never sent to the frontlines, and although he didn't speak Arabic, he was eventually able to understand basic commands in the language.

He told CBC that he made friends with other foreign fighters from Australia and Finland. The foreign fighters from central Asia were nice, he said, but they didn't speak English and he had no way of communicating with them.


The only Canadian he met was Mohammed Ali of Mississauga, who went by the nom de guerre Abu Turaab al-Kanadi, the man who had vouched for him.

Abu Huzaifa said he heard of other Canadians such as Andre Poulin, a Muslim convert from Timmins, Ont., who was known on social media as Abu Muslim al-Kanadi.

"I stayed away from social media and kept a low profile," said Abu Huzaifa.

Shariah law

Abu Huzaifa says he witnessed violence on a scale he could never have imagined.

He had seen al-Qaeda propaganda videos, but none of that, he said, could have prepared him for the regular diet of public lashings, beheadings and crucifixions that he witnessed.

It bothered him, "but ISIS told us these people deserved it because they were apostates who had to be punished," he said.

"People were forced to watch, some were disgusted, some even recorded it on their phones. You have to get used to the smell, the smell is bad. It is like iron. It stirs something in you and you have to learn to suppress it."

'Someone else's war'

Abu Huzaifa says his family played a big role in bringing him back.

"The things my mother would tell me when I was over there had a big impact on me," he said.

"She would remind me about the times in my childhood, and she said you're sacrificing yourself for someone else's war."

It dawned on him that he was going to die in Syria, and he kept asking himself, "What have you done with your life apart from disappointing your family?"

After days of planning his escape from ISIS, Abu Huzaifa ditched his Pakistani passport and headed for the Turkish border with his Canadian passport, which he had kept hidden.

Return home

The Turkish authorities arrested Abu Huzaifa after he surrendered to them at the border. He was detained, interrogated and severely beaten on a daily basis, he said.

"The Turkish police told me it would be better to go back to Pakistan instead of going to Canada," he said. They released him a week later, and he returned to Pakistan.

There, he was arrested and interrogated but eventually released after relatives intervened and promised he would not cause trouble.

He said he began to abuse heroin, Ritalin, ketamine, anything he could get his hands on that would drown out his emotional pain. That's when the nightmares about dying started.

'This is how you counter terrorism, by working with people who are affected by it directly.' - Mubin Shaikh, counsellor
"I would get numb, and half the night would pass and I'm just sitting in bed thinking," he said.

He stayed in Pakistan for two years before deciding to return to Canada.

"I have a lot to live for now. Growing up your mind matures and you start to see a lot of things you didn't see back then."

Counselled by former spy

Abu Huzaifa now believes that joining ISIS and enforcing its code was a violation of true Islamic principles and he is determined to complete his studies at a Toronto area university and make a positive contribution to society.

His new vision for a peaceful life in Canada can be attributed in part to Mubin Shaikh.

Abu Huzaifa said if he had met Shaikh three years ago he would have considered him to be an apostate. "I would have wanted to kill him. That is the truth," he told CBC.

A year after the two men were introduced to each other they have developed a close friendship.

Deradicalized

Abu Huzaifa said he no longer takes drugs to drown the pain, although the nightmares continue.

He hopes eventually to get married and start a family of his own.

For his part, Shaikh said it will be years before "we can say this person has been deradicalized."

But for now, Shaikh said, "if we can get one of their guys back on our side, it's a great victory, a great victory. We are sick of hearing that Muslims don't condemn terrorism enough.

"Condemnation is not the same as countering terrorism. This is how you counter terrorism, by working with people who are affected by it directly."


This reminded me of what is going on in Finland with returning jihadi expats - a few points among many;

1. Obviously, the guy did see violence, he was up to his neck in it. More than likely the intelligence community knew he was going there and in fact helped to place him there; to join this manufactured IS/ISIS - Saudi/Western backed so called new caliphate with one thing in mind.

Do people recall the three Canadian girls around the same time that were funneled through Jordan via a CISIS operative only to get caught - this was rather embarrassing for the government and it was brought up, and rightly so, in Parliament and then dropped like a hot rock, not to be spoke about again; one wonders why?

2. These guys (60 of them in Canada that are 'said' to be known) are lying about Syria as people here know, they are playing the victim card when they were nothing more than a bunch of manufactured mercenary killers period - age matters not as they were rounded up - being either mentally disturbed, thugs, drug addicts or conned by their local mufti who is likely supported by intelligence.

The bit about him spending his last Canadian dollars to buy his arms is rather rich (violins please) considering arms where trucked or flown in daily to these thugs, along with drugs etc., not to mention hiding his real passport. He claims he ‘enforced’ at a local prison, hmmm, enforce indeed. Remember who was in the local prisons in ISIS control territory and remember what was done to them - no mention in the article of anything contrary to what the intended narrative is. So, we welcome him home, how nice.

3. Not unknown here is that Canada, at the time, was supporting ISIS as a proxy army lockstep behind U.S./NATO and Saudi et al. No mystery here - well documented and spoken of even among the military and intelligence community; yet the citizens seem to be the last ones to know as usual.

It needs not be elaborated on that the press has gone ‘silent’ once Russians helped wipe out the jihadi's - since that gig was up the press has noting more to say and have moved along to the next bogeyman, or wherever they have been moved to - like Myanmar? Yet here the provide background for the reintegration process of the expat jihadi's while still paying the al-Assade was bad script.

4. This man obviously did extreme things when in Syria as a member of the head-chopping jihadi group, despite his claims - he is lying and CISIS knows it; yet he is likely still useful to them. However, it is rather galling how CISIS and Canada can open their arms to him when he should showcased, given a trial and locked up. So, it is likely that he and his ilk are nothing more than puppets who were played and will be played again, as Canadian’s are being played. Michael Springmann offers clues in his Visas for Al Qaeda: CIA Handouts That Rocked the World.”

In summary, we have statement(s) from CISIS - "For the past year, he has been counselled by Mubin Shaikh {a CISIS deprogramming agent}, the CSIS and RCMP undercover agent…” and "In a written statement, CSIS said it is aware of approximately 60 "extremist travellers" who have returned to Canada as of the end of August” and “...CSIS and RCMP agents have questioned him extensively since his return to Canada, but that he has not been charged.”

So, the so called “travellers” shaved off their beards and made some public denouements - got re hooked up with their handlers, were provided transportation and whisked through customs and immigration back home and now hang out with an agent of CISIS - a deprogrammer at that (red flag territory) while playing up how they were victims. Really, there was no problems at all in how our boarder controls and ‘super-connected' intelligence agencies processed them out and back home ‘knowing’ where they had been and what they were doing - and now it’s just a process to “deradicalize” - sell it to the public, soften them up and acclimatize them to that reality; poor misguided jihadi boys, we know you are hurting and here is a reintegration process. The public can now feel safe knowing the media, CISIS and RCMP have it covered. it’s simply pathetic.
 
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