Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

A February 2016 file photo of Aaron Driver leaves the Law Courts in Winnipeg, Manitoba. AP/The Canadian Press

Canadian shot dead after detonating explosive had links to global terrorism network

Aaron Driver (24) was killed on Wednesday during a police raid outside to home he was staying in.

AN ALLEGED ISLAMIC State sympathiser shot dead by Canadian federal police had been detained last year for pro-IS media posts, and an investigation has revealed extensive ties to foreign jihadists.

Aaron Driver (24) was killed on Wednesday during a police raid outside the home where he was staying with his sister in the town of Strathroy, Ontario, after he detonated a small explosive in the back seat of a cab.

Police said they acted to thwart an imminent “potential terrorist threat”.

Driver first came to the attention of authorities in October 2014 with tweets in support of IS and justifying the killing of a soldier standing guard at the Canadian National War Memorial in Ottawa by a young Muslim convert.

In June 2015, a court ordered him to undergo religious counseling, wear an electronic monitoring bracelet and stay off the internet. Those restrictions were gradually loosened and were scheduled to expire this month.

A convert to Islam, Driver’s views had apparently become increasingly radical after he began following the war in Syria online.

Canada Terror Threat Police confer outside of a house in Strathroy, Ontario, in Canada on Wednesday. AP / The Canadian Press AP / The Canadian Press / The Canadian Press

“If a country goes to war with another country or another people or another community, I think that they have to be prepared for things like” the 22 October, 2014 attack in Ottawa, Driver told public broadcaster CBC.

And when it does happen they shouldn’t, they shouldn’t act surprised. They had it coming to them; they deserved it.

Still, he publicly disavowed violence.

“I don’t think there’s a reason for Canadians to think that I’m a threat,” he said.

“Mischief makers”

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police, however, revealed that Driver had been in “fairly constant contact” with violent extremists around the world.

They included two members of the Islamic State group, a British youth arrested for his involvement in a terror plot targeting Australia, and Elton Simpson – one of two Americans who launched an attack on a Texas exhibition of caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed last year.

Canada Terror Threat Police outside the house in Canada late on Wednesday. AP / The Canadian Press AP / The Canadian Press / The Canadian Press

Investigators searching Driver’s home in 2015 found a recipe for homemade bombs on his computer.

In a video released by the RCMP on Thursday, Driver warned Canadians:

You have Muslim blood on your hands and for this we will have your blood.

He called Canadians and their allies “mischief makers” who spread “oppression and corruption”.

“You will pay for everything that you have done against us,” he said, dressed in black clothes and a balaclava.

According to Canadian media, Driver converted to Islam in his teens after a difficult childhood and a split with his father.

CBC said his mother died when he was seven years old. Driver and his father – a Canadian soldier – recounted last year in interviews with the CBC how their relationship had become strained.

Canada Terror Threat Police keep watch on the house yesterday. AP / The Canadian Press AP / The Canadian Press / The Canadian Press

The father, whose name was withheld, said his son had become increasingly withdrawn.

“It was like he turned out the lights and put a ‘Do Not Disturb’ sign on the door,” the father told CBC.

“When he was living at home, he was very secretive; a lone wolf. He didn’t bring friends over, never talked about where he was going and what he was doing,” Driver’s father said.

Driver lived away from home during most of his teenage years.

At age 17 he turned to religion. Baptized Christian in his birth province of Saskatchewan, he started reading the Bible, he said, but added “I just decided it couldn’t possibly be the word of God.”

After exploring other religions, he converted to Islam.

© – AFP, 2016

Read: Canadian police kill ‘terror suspect’ who was allegedly planning suicide attack

Read: Canada has begun an investigation into missing and dead native women

Author
View 26 comments
Close
26 Comments
    Submit a report
    Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
    Thank you for the feedback
    Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.
    JournalTv
    News in 60 seconds