What's yer problem, Hanly, guy's a towlhead, right?
All towlheads are terrorists and should be tortured to
avenge Syria's attack on the World Trade Center, and
also for hiding Saddam Hussein's WMD so we can't find
them. If you have done anything, you should't mind
being disappeared and tortured for a greater good. We
have to wipe out evcery vestife of extremism and
terroris, root it out, no matter what the cost, to
preserve our freedom,a nd anyway, it isn't like the
huy was white. Besides, he's a Canucka s well asa
Towlhead, and all you Canucks are commies, you have
national health and you didn't help us in Iraq. You
called the president a moron, so of course we're gonna
deport you to be tortyured by our friend in Syria, who
will help us find out who did the Twin Towers thing,
because we can't do torture ourselves, that would be
wrong, even if it is only a commie Canuck Muslim
fundamentalist terrorist. Some intesnse interrogation,
tahtw ould be OK, sleep deprivation, thats ort of
thing. Blowtorches to the balls, let the towlheads do
it to each other, tell su what they find out.

jks

--- k hanly <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> This is from CBC news. Outside of Canada there seems
> little coverage of this
> particularly nasty case of  just snatching someone
> who was changing planes
> and then no doubt farming him out to Syria to see if
> they could extract
> useful info from him by torture. It is ironic that
> the US authorities would
> send him to Syria a country the US accuses of
> supporting terrorism rather
> than Canada where we are supposedly just a bit
> sloppy in letting them slip
> through to the US!
>
> Cheers, Ken Hanly
>
> Canadian freed from Syrian jail happy to be home
> Last Updated Mon, 06 Oct 2003 21:37:24
> MONTREAL - Maher Arar's return to Canada is the
> beginning of his hunt for
> justice, his wife says.
>
> Maher, 33, arrived at Montreal's Dorval Airport
> Monday afternoon.
>
>
> The Canadian citizen was jailed in Syria, where he
> was born, for 374 days
> after U.S immigration officials arrested him in New
> York and deported him
> last fall.
>
> At a brief new conference at Dorval, Arar talked
> about his children and "my
> fellow Canadians who have contributed and helped me
> get back home."
>
> He said he was excited to see his family. "My kids
> grew up in the last
> year."
>
>
> FROM OCT. 21, 2002: Missing Ottawa engineer turns up
> in Syria
>
> But his wife, Monia Mazigh, said her husband's
> "terrible tragedy" isn't over
> yet. "It's just the beginning of justice for my
> husband."
>
>
> Maher Arar speaks to the media
>
> Arar was first detained by U.S. authorities in
> September 2002 while he was
> changing planes in New York. He was travelling from
> Tunisia to Canada.
>
> U.S. authorities said his name was on a terrorist
> list and they suspected
> him of being a member of al-Qaeda. After 10 days,
> they deported him, not to
> Canada but to to his native Syria.
>
> While he has both Syrian and Canadian citizenship,
> he hasn't lived in Syria
> for more than 15 years.
>
> Arar was jailed upon his return to Syria, but not
> formally charged.
>
> Both Amnesty International and Mazigh had lobbied
> hard to keep Canadian
> officials focused on the case.
>
>
> FROM SEPT. 25, 2003: RCMP leaves MPs in dark about
> Arar case
>
> His case has been shrouded in confusion.
>
> There have been suggestions he was tortured in
> Syria, and questions about
> the RCMP's role, if any, in passing information to
> U.S. authorities.
>
> Arar, a software engineer from Ottawa, appears to be
> in good health.
>
>
>
> Written by CBC News Online


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