Canadians in Algeria attack became angry, alienated at home - Action News
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Canadians in Algeria attack became angry, alienated at home

Two years before the deadly al-Qaeda linked attack on an Algerian refinery, one of the two Canadian militants who participated in the assault made a farewell tour of London, Ont., and said goodbye to those he knew, CBC News has learned.

Young men from London, Ont., changed as they sought a radical path

The path to radicalization

12 years ago
Duration 4:42
3 youths in London, Ont., changed over the years in the eyes of their friends

Two years before the deadly al-Qaeda linked attack on anAlgerian refinery, one of the two Canadian militants who participated in the assault made a farewell tour of London, Ont., and said goodbye to those he knew, CBC News has learned, as more details emerge about the young men.

Where Ali Medlej disappeared to before the deadly attack in January and how he may havebeen trained to participate in it are not yet known, but CBC News has learned that Medlej and fellow militant Xris Katsiroubas had been searching for a radical path, something they didnt find in their citys main mosque or at a youth centre.

One of Medlejs friends remembers a disturbing conversation with him, in which he said he was wrestling with a spiritual pursuit, but didnt want to give up girls or drinking. He said Ali told him,"There's things that I just can't give up on in my lifestyle, and it's hard for me to be a practising Muslim, so why don't I just be a shaheed [martyr] and go straight to heaven instead of all the effort that I can't seem to do."

Athird man, Aaron Yoon, travelled to North Africa with Medlej and Katsiroubas before the attack but did not participate in it. CBC News has confirmed that Aaron Yoon is in jail in the Islamic Republic of Mauritania in North Africa. Foreign Affairs confirms it is aware of this.

Like the others, Yoon was a student at London South Secondary School. He had been raised a Catholic, but converted to Islam, as did Katsiroubas, who had been Greek Orthodox, and along with Medlej they were given space at the school to perform prayers.

A former colleague, who asked not to be named, worked with Yoon in 2008 and then again in 2011, saidshe noticed a drastic change in his demeanour over that time.

"He just didnt have that spark. He wasnt that friendly, outgoing guy anymore. He just seemed lost and kind of dead inside," she said.

"He had a lot of friends, He was very sociable. But then he just didnt want to talk to anyone. He didnt open up to anyone. It was just him and his religion and his job. That's it."

How the young Canadians became involved in the attack in Algeria is not yet clear, but the CBCs Greg Weston reports that sources suggest they were influenced by one man operating in southwestern Ontario.