3 Canadians, including 2 members of the military service, accused of links to the plot for
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Ahmad Mukhtar is a producer of News themezone with headquarters in Toronto, Canada. It covers politics, conflict and terrorism, with an focus on the news of Canada and its native nation of Afghanistan, which left after the return of the Taliban to power in 2021.
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Toronto – The Canadian police have presented charges against three men, including two active members of the Canadian Armed Forces, who are accused of an alleged extremist plot to build anti -government militias and a massive storage of weapons, said the Royal Canadian police mounted (RCMP) on Tuesday in a statement. A suspicious room has been accused of crimes of weapons in relation to the investigation.
According to the Police, the three suspects participated in military -style training as part of the anti -government extremism and “supposedly participated in activities with the intention of taking possession of land in the area of the city of Quebec.”
According to an investigation, the three suspects took concrete actions to facilitate the alleged terrorist activities.

“The Three Accused Were Planning to Create Anti-Government Militia. To Achieve This, They Took Part In Military-Style Training, As Well As Shooting, Ambush, Survival and Navigation Exercises,” The Police Said, Adding That Searches CarRIed Out In January 2024 Around Quebec Quebec City “Led to the Seizure of 16 Explosive Devices, 83 Firearms and Accessors, Approximately 11,000 Rounds of Ammunition of Various Calibers, Nearly 130 Magazines, Four Pares of Night Vision glasses and military equipment.”
The fourth individual faces positions that include possession of firearms, devices and prohibited explosives, and the transfer and storage of weapons and ammunition.
The RCMP released photos of the training of accused people, along with photos of the seized weapons.
One of the suspects is also accused of creating and managing an Instagram account aimed at recruiting new members.

The office of the Marshal provost of the Canadian forces, in a statement to News themezone, said that the Military Police and the Canadian army supported the investigation, which led to the four arrests.
The statement said that the two active members of the Canadian forces were bodily based in CFB Valcartier, about nine miles northwest of the city of Quebec. One was a former member of the Armed Forces, and the fourth was a former civil instructor with the Royal Canadian Air Cadets.
“Violent extremism is still a serious concern in Canadian and international society,” said the statement of the rector’s Marshal office.
- Terrorism
- Domestic terrorism
- Extremism
- Canada
Ahmad Mukhtar
Ahmad Mukhtar is a producer of News themezone with headquarters in Toronto, Canada. It covers politics, conflict and terrorism, with an focus on the news of Canada and its native nation of Afghanistan, which left after the return of the Taliban to power in 2021.


