Are Canadian Spies Helping The Terrorist ISIS Recruit Muslims From The West?

0
318

Turkey Arrests Man Claiming To Work For Canadian Spy Agency CSIS Who Helped Three British Muslim Girls Join ISIS!

Mohammad Al Rashed, a Syrian who purportedly went by the alias Dr. Mehmet Reşit, allegedly helped the three British girls, whom the media had reported were recruited by ISIS, cross from Turkey into Syria shortly after they flew from London to Istanbul on Feb. 17. Rashed claims he relayed information about his trip with the three British teens to Canadian intelligence on Feb. 21, and told Turkish authorities his ultimate goal was to obtain Canadian citizenship. The report also says Turkish authorities have screen shots of text messages Rashed sent to Canadian intelligence officials. There is much speculation that ISIS is a CIA creation funded and armed with Saudi money designed to wreck chaos in the Middle East, especially to destablize Iraq and Syria. This claim of Canadian spies helping ISIS will only add fuel to the fire.

TORONTO – An accused spy detained in Turkey for allegedly helping three British girls join ISIS claims he worked for a Canadian intelligence agency, according to a Turkish intelligence report obtained by CBC News.

Mohammad Al Rashed, a Syrian who purportedly went by the alias Dr. Mehmet Reşit, allegedly helped the girls cross from Turkey into Syria shortly after they flew from London to Istanbul on Feb. 17, reported CBC News.

Kadiza Sultana,16, left, Shamima Begum, 15, centre, and 15-year-old Amira Abase went to Syria through Turkey in February. A Syrian man accused of helping them join ISIS claims he has worked for Canadian intelligence, according to a Turkish report.

A video has been released showing Rashed in the act of helping three British schoolgirls join Islamic State militants in Syria. The video, published by Turkey’s A Haber news channel, is footage apparently filmed by the suspect himself.

According to the intelligence report, Rashed accompanied the three teens —  two aged 15 and one 16 — on a bus to Gaziantep, a town near the Turkey-Syria border often used as a staging point by those looking to join ISIS. Rashed allegedly left the girls with “individuals involved in human trafficking” with the understanding they would be taken to Syria.

In a witness statement included in the report, Rashed claims he worked for Canadian intelligence and travelled occasionally to the Canadian Embassy in Jordan to share information he had gathered.

He claims he relayed information about his trip with the three British teens to Canadian intelligence on Feb. 21, and told Turkish authorities his ultimate goal was to obtain Canadian citizenship.

Rashed was detained on Feb. 28. According to the intelligence report, plane and bus tickets in the girls’ names were found in his possession, as well as video of the girls meeting the human traffickers and setting off for the Syrian border. Similarly, photos of passports and images of passport stamps for at least 20 other people were found in his possession.

The report also says Turkish authorities have screen shots of text messages Rashed sent to Canadian intelligence officials.

Rashed purportedly entered Turkey 33 times using his Syrian passport, according to the report, and received multiple money wire transfers from people in England “with Arab names.” According to the report, there is no evidence that Canadian intelligence officials sent Rashed money at any point.

The Turkish foreign minister said Rashed is a Syrian national working for a country in the U.S.-led coalition fighting ISIS, but did not elaborate further.

“The person who helped the three British girls into Syria is a Syrian national working for another country within the coalition. The situation is so complicated,” Mevlut Cavusoglu told reporters in Ankara.

Courtesy CBC News