This Article is From Oct 26, 2010

Mass-murder terror plotter in Canada gets 16 years in jail

Toronto: Canada on Monday sentenced to 16 years the man behind the country's first Al-Qaida-inspired mass-murder plot unearthed in 2006.  Known as the Toronto-18 terror plot, it was uncovered with the arrest of 18 people, mostly of Pakistani origin, in June 2006.

The plotters had planned to storm the Canadian parliament, take Prime Minister Stephen Harper hostage and behead him.

They had also planned to blow up the Toronto Stock Exchange, military installations and offices of the Canadian spy agency to revenge Canada's participation in the war in Afghanistan.

To carry out the plot, they had undergone training in firearms at a rural camp far away from Toronto in December 2005.

The plot was unearthed when a mole - paid more than $4 million by the police to act as a co-conspirator - blew the whistle on it. Zakaria Amara, 24, the ring leader of the plot, was jailed for life in January.

A court in Toronto on Monday sentenced Afghan-born Fahim Ahmad, 26, to 16 years for his role in the plot. Since the terrorist has been behind bars since June 2006, the judge gave him a time served credit of eight years and nine months.

"As a leader and the person who initiated all of the activities that have given rise to these other (Toronto 18) convictions, it is fitting that Fahim Ahmad receive a sentence that reflects his leadership role," said the judge in the verdict.

But under Canada's lenient laws, the father of two will be eligible for parole in three and a half years.

Because of its lax laws, Canada has come under criticism from the US where many people still believe that the 9/11 hijackers came from Canada.

However, attempts to tighten anti-terror laws face problems because of the country's so-called Charters of Rights and Freedoms introduced in 1982.
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