A man who appeared on Canada's version of American
Idol was the third person arrested as part of an alleged
plot against targets in Canada and abroad, police say.
The two other suspects made a brief appearance in court on
charges they had plans to make bombs and had plans to use
them.
Police arrested Hiva Alizadeh and Misbahuddin Ahmed in Ottawa
on Wednesday and Khurram Syed Sher in London, Ontario.
Alizadeh, 30, and Ahmed, 26, appeared in court. All three are
Canadian.
Sher, 28, appeared on the reality show Canadian Idol
in 2008 in which he sings a comical version of Avril
Lavigne's Complicated, complete with dance moves that
include a moonwalk. He told the judges he's from Pakistan and
likes hockey, music and acting.
Police allege the men had plans and schematics to make
improvised explosive devices.
Police seized 50 electronic circuit boards which they say
could be used as remote-control triggers for bombs. They said
one of the men was trained overseas to make explosive booby
traps, but did not specify which one.
Police say they moved in on the men to prevent them from
sending money to terror groups in Afghanistan.
"The arrests have prevented the gathering of bombs and the
execution of one or many terrorist attacks," RCMP Chief Supt.
Serge Therriault said.
Therriault said details on the targets would be released in
court. Police allege they conspired with an additional three
named individuals to "knowingly facilitate terrorist
activities" in Canada and abroad. Police say the plot ranged
from Canada to Iran, Afghanistan, Dubai and Pakistan, but did
not elaborate.
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper said the arrests
should remind Canadians that they are not immune to
terrorism.
"The networks that threaten us are worldwide. They exist not
only in remote countries but they have - through
globalisation and through thei internet - they have links
through our country and all through the world," Harper said.
A judge remanded Alizadeh and Ahmed in custody until they
appear again, by video, next week.
Police said Sher is a doctor in St. Thomas, Ontario, and that
Ahmed is an X-ray technician in Ottawa.
Ahmed's lawyer, Ian Carter, said the charges are serious and
his client, a husband and father, could be put away "for a
long time."
"He is in shock. That's all I can say," Carter said.
Police descended on a home in Canada's national capital of
Ottawa.
The arrests come four years after the apprehension of the
so-called Toronto 18, suspects in a homegrown terror plot
that involved the attempted setting off of truck bombs in
front of Canada's main stock exchange and two government
buildings. The ringleaders and others have been convicted.
Canadian Security Intelligence Service director Dick Fadden
alluded to the possibility of other homegrown terrorist cases
in comments to a Parliament public safety committee last
month.
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