Conservatives call return of Canadian woman with ISIS ties 'unacceptable' - Action News
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Conservatives call return of Canadian woman with ISIS ties 'unacceptable'

The Conservatives say it's "unacceptable" that the federal government allowed a Canadian woman with ties to ISIS to re-enter the country.

Canadian woman was married to one of the most notorious ISIS militants

Dure Ahmed
Dure Ahmed during an interview with BBC at a camp for families of ISIS fighters in Syria in 2022. (Jewan Abdi/CBC)

The Conservatives say it's "unacceptable" that the federal government allowed a Canadian woman with ties to ISIS to re-enter the country.

CBC News reported Tuesday new details about the identity of a 33-year-old woman the government repatriated with her children in April from a detention camp in northeastern Syria.

Dure Ahmed, who is now living in the Toronto area under conditions, was married to El Shafee Elsheikh. He's a high-profile ISIS militant who was part of a cell known as "the Beatles"because of their British accents.

Elsheikh is the highest ranking ISIS member to be tried in the U.S. He's serving multiple life sentences in a supermaxprison for his role in the deaths of eight American, British and Japanese hostages.

"It is unacceptable that the Trudeau government allowed someone affiliated with one of the world's worst terrorist groups to re-enter Canada without first ensuring the safety and security of Canadians from this terrorist threat," said Conservative foreign affairs critic Michael Chongin a statement to CBC News.

"This is but one example of Mr. Trudeau's neglect of Canada's national security."

Crown Attorney Marie Comiskey told a court in Brampton, Ont.on Tuesday that Ahmed had been "steeped" in ISIS ideology during her more than eight years living in Syria in ISIS territory or in a detention camp.

WATCH/ Repatriated Canadian woman was married to notorious ISIS fighter, court confirms

Repatriated Canadian woman was married to notorious ISIS fighter, court confirms

12 months ago
Duration 3:11
A repatriated Canadian woman with ties to ISIS was married to a notorious fighter who is now in a U.S. prison for his role in the executions of four American hostages. Dure Ahmed has not been charged with a crime but her presence in Canada worries some who lost family members to the Islamic State.

The Crown said it's "likely" that Ahmed knew of her husband's role inISIS before leaving Canada in 2014 to join him in Syria. Comiskeysaid she also believes the relationship continued and they communicated in recent years.

Comiskeysaid she has reasonable grounds to believe that Ahmed couldcommit terrorism offences in Canada, including indoctrinating and recruiting others to join ISIS.

During a hearing onthe conditions of a terrorism peace bond,Ahmed'slawyer, Yoav Niv, said there was no admission of criminal liabilityin court on Tuesday.

Niv saidpeople should not bepunished for other people's crimes. He said the case is still under investigation and currently no one is allegingAhmedwaspresent for any crimes.

"So we need ot be careful with how inflammatory allegations can be made," Niv told CBC News. "After all, she's been repatriated. The government decided to bring her back, so whatever security concerns did exist, they weren'tso much that she wasn't allowed back into the country."

'This is very frightening'

The president of the Canadian Yazidi Association, Jamileh Naso, said she's "horrified"that Canada repatriated Ahmed.

"That is very frightening that someone like that has been welcomed back and repatriated into the country," Naso told CBC News.

Naso's association represents hundreds of Yazidis who sought safe haven in Canada after escaping ISIS captivity in Syria.

photo of dure ahmed entering a courthouse
Dure Ahmed covered her face with a mask and the hood of her jacket while entering the courthouse in Brampton, Ont. on Tuesday. (CBC News)

She said they were already re-traumatized when they learnedthat the federal government was repatriating women from northeastern Syria.

"We want these folks to face the full brunt of the Canadian justice system," Naso said. "It does not feel like justice has been served at all."

Naso said that, like many members of Canada's Yazidi community, she lost family members to ISIS. In a campaign launched in 2014, ISIS set out to eradicate the Yazidi people, who are members of anancient Kurdish-speaking farming community in northern Iraq.

The federal government brought roughly 1,200 Yazidi survivors, mostly women and girls, to Canada. Naso said some were abused and sexually assaulted by ISIS.

'I can be charged tomorrow'

Amarnath Amarasingam, a terrorism researcher at Queens University, said some wives of ISIS members "didn't do anything except stay home," while others were "exceptionally brutal" and owned slaves of their own.

In the Netherlands, somerepatriated citizens have been charged with crimes against humanity, suchaspillaging, using Yazidi women as slaves or illegally living in houses that ISIS took from the owners.

In an exclusive interview this week with CBC Podcasts and the BBC, Ahmed denied any wrongdoingand called her decision to travel to Syria to be with her husband in 2014 a "stupid mistake." She also denied knowing what her husband was doing in Syria and acknowledged she could face charges.

"I can be charged tomorrow," said Ahmed. "I could be charged next week, next year.

"Everything is still ongoing ... Obviously Canada's priority, and most countries' priority, is public safety. If I was a threat or they found me an imminent threat, I won't be out. I'd be in jail."

Mourners carry remains of Yazidi victims of ISIS following their exhumation from a mass grave near Kojo, Iraq, February 6, 2021.
Mourners carry remains of Yazidi victims of ISIS following their exhumation from a mass grave near Kojo, Iraq on February 6, 2021. (Reuters)

Leah West, a professor of national security law atCarleton University,said women who supported or participated in ISIS are often defended by claims that they were duped or manipulated.

"I think these women's agency needs to be recognized and that adult women, just like adult men, should be held accountable for their actions," said West.

West said more charges are being laid against other repatriated women.

"It seems like once they've returned, the RCMP is building their case, potentially in conjunction with interviews of those women now that they're back in Canada, and seeking to prosecute them where they can," said West.

court sketch of dure ahmed in court
A Canadian woman who was repatriated with her children in April from a detention camp in northeastern Syria was married to a member of the notorious Islamic State cell known as the Beatles, an Ontario court heard Monday. (Alexandra Newbould)

Terrorism charges laid in other cases

The RCMP charged Ammara Amjad earlier this month with allegedly participating in activities of the Islamic State group. She was one of the other women repatriated at the same time as Ahmed in April part of a group of four women and 10 children the government brought back to Canada.

Ottawa lawyer Lawrence Greensponrepresentedthe repatriated women in a federal court case. Greenspon saidhe hopes the RCMPare not usingany information the women share during court-ordered counselling or social services against them.

"I would hate to think that the RCMP is turning around and using the results of those counselling services to up the ante to criminal charges," said Greenson. "I certainly hope that's not the case."

The RCMP said it would not comment, citing the fact that the matter is before the courts.

Ahmed's case returns to court on Thursday, where a judge is expected to rule on the conditions of a terrorism peace bond.

The Crown said what's beingasked for is"slightly more freedom" for Ahmed so she can reintegrate, but with protections in place, such asRCMP monitoring.

With files from Poonam Taneja, Jewan Abdi, Evan Dyer, Marnie Luke and Eva Ugen-Csenge