Canadian police shot dead an alleged
Islamic State sympathizer who was about to activate an explosive device in
Ontario late on Wednesday, media reports said as police confirmed thwarting a
“potential terror threat”. There was no immediate confirmation from Canada’s
federal police that anyone had been shot, with a statement saying only that a
suspect had been identified and that they had taken “action” after receiving
“credible information” about a potential attack. “Earlier today, the RCMP
received credible information of a potential terrorist threat.
A suspect was identified and the
proper course of action has been taken to ensure that there is no danger to the
public’s safety,” the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) said in a statement.
They did not say where the incident took place. Media reports said the suspect
was a 24-year-old man who had been arrested in 2015 for expressing support for
the Islamic State group in postings on social media.
He had been released in February but
was being strictly monitored. According to a family member who spoke to
Canadian broadcaster CBC, the police had informed them that he was shot dead as
he was about to detonate an explosive device. Broadcaster CTV also reported
that the suspect was allegedly linked to IS and had been planning to set off an
explosive device in a packed public space in a major city, citing internal
government documents.
The RCMP said an investigation was
under way as the matter “continues to unfold,” and no other details from
officials were immediately available. Canada was the target of two separate
lone wolf attacks in October 2014 in Quebec and Ottawa that resulted in the
death of two soldiers. In Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, 40 kilometers (25 miles)
southeast of Montreal, a young man drove his car into two soldiers in a parking
lot, killing one of them before being shot dead by police after a short chase.
Two days later on October 22, an
attacker gunned down a ceremonial military guard and stormed parliament before
being killed by security guards only meters (yards) from a room where the prime
minister and his caucus were meeting. Following these attacks, the Conservative
government passed a bill giving the RCMP and Canada’s spy agency sweeping
powers to thwart terror plots and prevent Canadian youth from flying overseas
to join the Islamic State group in Syria. Canada joined the US-led coalition
against IS in September 2014.
Source:Vanguard News
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