Key points:

-3 tons of ammonium nitrate were found, as well as weapons and
walkie-talkies.

An RCMP spokesman stated that the cell had "all the components of the bomb,"
which may have been why the raid occurred when it did.

The raids were the result of the FBI's April arrests of two men in Georgia.
Those two men were planning attacks with a Toronto cell.

--Ben

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/content/article/2006/06/03/canadaterror
3.html


7 Suspected Terrorists Arrested in Canada



By Doug Struck
Washington Post Foreign Service
June 3, 2006; 11:38 AM 

TORONTO, June 3 -- Canadian police and intelligence agents say they foiled a
"series of terrorist attacks" by a group that had obtained three tons of
explosive fertilizer -- more than the amount used in the Oklahoma City
bombings -- to attack targets in Ontario. 

Twelve men -- described as "mainly Canadian citizens" -- and five juveniles
were arrested in a series of raids Friday night at locations in the outlying
suburbs of Toronto in enclaves for immigrant groups in Canada. The men, all
with Arabic names, were mostly in their 20s. 

Police say they seized weapons, walkie-talkies, and a large quantity of
ammonium nitrate, the same chemical used to make a fertilizer bomb that
destroyed the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City in 1995, killing 168
persons. 

Police refused to identify the targets of the alleged bomb plot or discuss
details of the plan. Reports in the Canadian press said the investigators
moved because the bombing was evident, and targets included large public
buildings. Authorities said it was the biggest sweep conducted under
Canada's anti-terrorism laws, passed after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. 

Mike McDonell, an assistant commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police, said at a press conference the arrested men were "planning to commit
a series of terrorist attacks against solely-Canadian targets in southern
Ontario." They had acquired all the components of the bomb, he said. 

"This group posed a real and serious intent. They had the capacity and
intent to carry out an attack," he said. He said the group had trained
together, and the arrests show that "Canada is susceptible to criminal
terrorist activities as much as any country." 

The investigation, which McDonell said involved more than 400 persons, also
included Canada's intelligence agency, the Canada Security and Intelligence
Agency. 

Luc Portelance, assistant director of operations for CSIS, said the arrested
men "are Canadian residents from a variety of backgrounds. For various
reasons, they appear to become adherents of virulent ideology inspired by
al-Qaeda." But McDonell later suggested investigators had found no direct
connection with al-Qaeda. 

The men, dubbed "home-grown terrorists" by the Canadian media, were
scheduled to appear in court later Saturday to hear terrorism-related
charges. The subjects were held at a police station in Pickering, 18 miles
west of downtown Toronto, with heavy security posted outside the building.
Police said they were not permitted to give any information about the five
juveniles. 

Canadian reports said the raids were the consequence of the arrests by the
FBI of two Georgia men in April. At the time, the FBI announced the two men
had met with others in Toronto to plan attacks.



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