Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Update...

Ali Dirie was also sent to 'the hole' on Monday when he mentioned that he was a witness to the atrocities of the Maplehurst staff against Steven Chand.

Steven Chand appeared in court on Monday morning, barely able to stand or move his head.

'The hole' is a segregation worse than their current one. Apparently it is a tiny cubicle with just concrete slabs.

However, today, four days later, family members say that both Ali Dirie and Steven chand have been returned to their cells.

Furthermore, after an intense 10 days in court, the accused are allowed to pray jummah in congregation, along with university/textbook access approved by Lt. Jones. Steven Chand was also finally able to take a shower today- he was denied access to showering for the last few days.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Jailed Terror Suspects hold Hunger strike

May 14, 2007 04:30 AM

Staff Reporter

The Canadian terrorism suspects being held at the Maplehurst Correctional Complex began a hunger strike yesterday after one of their co-accused claimed he was beaten by jailhouse staff, say several relatives.

The incident, they say, began when Steven Chand was allegedly told by a guard that his time in the shower was up. Chand claimed he still had soap in his hair but was pulled from the shower, beaten and dragged, crying and screaming, to his cell.

According to relatives, Chand told his co-accused what had occurred before he was "thrown into the hole," said Cheryfa MacAulay Jamal, wife of one of the accused.

"My husband saw (Chand) being dragged by the hair," she said, recounting what Abdul Qayyum Jamal told her on the phone. "He said (Chand) had a bruise on his head and was asking to see the doctor."

The men were among 18 adults and youths arrested last year, and alleged to be part of a homegrown terrorism cell plotting to bomb several targets in southern Ontario.

Maplehurst staff would not comment.

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Terror Suspects Ask For Prison Conditions To Be Eased

Melissa Leong and Darryl Konynenbelt , National Post Published: Monday, May 07, 2007
http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.html?id=f5505f2e-dd4e-4488-9c65-28ac61d97b50&k=50154

BRAMPTON, Ont. - Lawyers for several men accused of plotting to bomb target in southern Ontario were in court Monday requesting their clients be released from solitary confinement, a condition one lawyer called "cruel and unusual punishment."

"Prolonged isolation is torture," Edward Sapiano, a Toronto defence lawyer, said in front of the Brampton courthouse. "The Supreme Court of Canada has expressly stated that prolonged isolation is not something that would survive a charter challenge."

The proceedings which are subject to a publication ban, are expected to last two weeks.

The suspects, held since the "Toronto 17" arrests last summer, are held in isolation at Maplehurst Correctional Complex in Milton; many have been in solitary confinement since then. A court order forbids most of the co-accused from communicating with one another.

Monte Kwinter, Ontario's Minister of Community Safety and Correctional Services, said Monday he is satisfied the accused are being treated properly.

Outside court, Cheryfa MacAulay Jamal said her husband Qayum Jamal, the eldest of the suspects, spends more than 23 hours a day in a 10-by-12-foot cell with a desk, a toilet and a bed. It leaves him only four feet of room to move, she said.

She is permitted two 20-minute visits with her husband a week, she said. She also said she was able to bring lunch - chicken shawarma, samosas and Coke - for the 11 accused.

They were casually dressed Monday and sat shoulder-to-shoulder inside two glass prisoner boxes. Because the suspects eat together, are transported to Brampton from the federal penitentiary in the same vehicle and are held in the same cell at the court house, their lawyers charge that the non-communication order is fruitless. "With respect to an order that imposes non-communication, the justice system should not be imposing an order that is unenforceable," said Sapiano who represents Yasin Mohamed, charged with smuggling weapons for terrorist purposes.

He said his client has never requested protective custody but the prison authorities do not want the accused to be in the general population. He said he is optimistic their constitutional challenge will be successful. "I anticipate ... I'll be given all that I ask for on behalf of my client that he not be subjected to isolation and be allowed to co-mingle with other human beings."

Seventeen men living in and around Toronto were arrested in a series of raids conducted over two days last June. An 18th man was arrested a month later.

Some have been granted bail. All are charged with belonging to a Canadian terrorist group.

Food..

For the first time in almost a year, the 12 individuals were able to eat food of their choice, in court, on Monday May 7th 2007.

Family members rushed out from the court to bring shawarma, samosas and coke to court for the individuals on Monday. The individuals, teary eyed, mouthed words of thanks across the court to their families.

Previously, the accused would leave Maplehurst Detention Centre early in the morning with a light breakfast often consisting of a hard, pancake type, 'cardboard' bread and would be served one light fish or vegetable sandwich in the afternoon. (Nothing filling). Upon returning to Maplehurst in the evening, dinner would be over (at 4pm) and they would not be served anything until the next morning.