ISLAM IN CANADA Islam is deception islamic concepts

CANADA: MUSLIM GOVERNMENT PROMOTED AS FIGHTER AGAINST ”ISLAMIC RADICALSIM” FUNDED TERROR ORGANIZATION…….

How many times do we have to play this game of whack-a-tard to finally figure out that any form of support of Islam in the West has to be suspect?

H/T: Sheik Yer’Mami (pbuh)

That was until a Quebec blog, Point de Bascule, re-published some of his student writings in April and alleged he was linked, through his charitable donations, to organizations like IRFAN-Canada, designated a terrorist group by the federal government in 2014 for its links to Hamas.

Hussein Hamdani: Vetted by the feds, felled by a blog

hussein hamadi

Three months ago, Hussein Hamdani was widely hailed as a hero on the front lines of Canada’s war against homegrown terrorism, regularly pulling teenagers back from the brink of radicalization — before they boarded a plane to Syria or Iraq.

He has been the federal government’s bridge to the Muslim community, and at a counter-terrorism summit in Washington in February, Public Safety Minister Steven Blaney himself praised the efforts of Hamilton’s Muslim Community — of which Hamdani is an integral part.

Following recent reports on a Quebec blog and then a news network, however, Hamdani now stands accused of being a radical Islamist himself — and the federal government has stopped returning his emails.

But is Hamdani, by day a corporate and commercial lawyer, really a fox in the henhouse?

Or is he, as some suggest, the latest target in a fear and smear campaign, made in Quebec and imported to Ottawa?

Hamdani learned the news like everyone else: through the Quebec media. At the end of April, the TVA news network reported that Hamdani had been suspended from the Cross Cultural Roundtable on National Security, which he has sat on since 1995.

“I’ve been there longer than Stephen Harper has been prime minister,” Hamdani said earlier this month, from his office in downtown Hamilton.

The Roundtable, which has 15 members from different ethno-cultural communities across Canada, is meant to be a bridge between those communities and the government, meeting every few months to “focus on emerging developments in national security matters and their impact on Canada’s diverse and pluralistic society.”

Among their recent topics: countering violent extremism, cyberspace and migration (See the full list of members here)

Hamdani has also led outreach efforts, helping CSIS and the RCMP approach sometimes reluctant groups, while intervening with youths showing signs of radicalization on behalf of their parents.

“I’ve probably done more than anyone else in Canada,” Hamdani says. “And because we’re exposed to certain information that’s not public and we work with the RCMP and CSIS, I have security clearance and my background has been vetted. There are no links to anything of concern.”

More here.

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