Friday, December 5, 2025
ADVT 
National

Edmonton attacks on officer, pedestrians 'unstoppable terrorism:' experts

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Oct, 2017 11:12 AM
    Terrorism experts say a poorly-planned attack in Edmonton may be have been inspired rather than directed by Islamic State militants, a type of attack that is difficult if not impossible to prevent.
     
    Police say a man in a car first ran down, then stabbed, an officer outside Commonwealth Stadium during an Edmonton Eskimos football game Saturday night before running away. A few hours later, police chased a suspect driving a U-Haul cube van as it struck four pedestrians downtown.
     
    The officer was not seriously injured but there was no word on the pedestrians. An Islamic State flag was found in the car that hit the officer. A 30-year-old man is in custody.
     
    "I'm not sure how you're going to stop an attack of this nature," said Phil Gurski, a threat consultant in Ottawa and former analyst with the Canadian Security Intelligence Service.
     
    Gurski said it's clear the suspect wasn't very smart since he handed a police officer his driver's licence at a checkstop that connected him with the car that struck the officer, sparking the police chase.
     
    But he said such attacks are "unstoppable terrorism."
     
    "It's impossible to stop unless the person's already on your radar," said Gurski.
     
    Edmonton Mayor Don Iveson called the suspect a "lone wolf," adding "random acts of sick people are difficult to anticipate."
     
    Stephanie Carvin, a terrorism expert at Carleton University, said the attack looked unsophisticated.
     
    "It seems to have been carried out very badly (thankfully) so probably not a mastermind here, folks," she said on Twitter. "But attacks against crowds and sports fans has been a HUGE fear in Canada over the last 18 months. This will not help that."
     
    Edmonton's mega mall and oil industry have raised concerns in the past that the Alberta capital might be a terrorist target.
     
    In 2015, the RCMP investigated a reported video from Al-Shabab that appeared to urge Muslims to attack shopping malls in western countries, including the West Edmonton Mall. Three years earlier, the federal government set up a counter-terrorism unit in the province to protect the energy industry from possible extremist attacks.
     
    Amarnath Amarasingam, an expert on extremism at the University of Waterloo, said the Edmonton attack appears to be a "fairly typical ISIS-inspired one," although it may be difficult to confirm. The group has recently been sloppy about claiming credit for attacks and is also reluctant to do so when attackers are in custody, he said.
     
    The group has long called on followers to attack wherever in the world they may be, Amarasingam added.
     
    "Any Western city will do, whether in Europe or North America," he said. "For them, it's about sowing fear, turning communities against one another, and creating the impression that they are everywhere."
     
    The leader of the Islamic State recently released an audio message reiterating the need for attacks in the west, especially on military members or police officers of NATO countries, said Edmonton security consultant David Jones.
     
    Jones said it wasn't a coincidence the officer was stabbed outside the football stadium, which was also hosting a military appreciation night.
     
    Canada's spy agency views terrorist acts at home as a "constant" threat, according to a briefing note prepared last November for Michel Coulombe, then-director of CSIS.
     
    "The principal terrorist threat to Canada remains that posed by violent extremists who are inspired to carry out an attack in Canada," reads the document obtained by The Canadian Press under Access to Information legislation.
     
    "Terrorist activity can be sudden or spontaneous, or in some cases, take months or years in planning and logistics."
     
    The document also said CSIS is studying "behavioural indicators" that suggest an individual is moving from holding extremist ideas to taking action — whether it's travelling abroad, supporting others who plan to commit terrorist acts or plotting an attack in Canada or elsewhere.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Tax changes to make system fair not stifle business growth: Trudeau

    Tax changes to make system fair not stifle business growth: Trudeau
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the government has no intention of stifling growth for small businesses and start-ups with its upcoming changes to the tax code.

    Tax changes to make system fair not stifle business growth: Trudeau

    Trudeau urges Canadian companies to seek fortune in China's $5 trillion market

    Trudeau urges Canadian companies to seek fortune in China's $5 trillion market
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called on Canada's small-and-medium sized businesses to embrace globalization and help deepen what he termed the "Canada-China friendship" by exploring the market potential of selling to its half-billion increasingly spend-happy consumers.

    Trudeau urges Canadian companies to seek fortune in China's $5 trillion market

    Suspect in Quebec Amber Alert case makes brief initial court appearance

    The 41-year-old father at the heart of an Amber Alert in Quebec earlier this month was hunched over, eyes fixed to the ground as he made his first appearance in court Monday.

    Suspect in Quebec Amber Alert case makes brief initial court appearance

    Attention intensifies around Prince Harry and Meghan Markle at Invictus Games

    Attention intensifies around Prince Harry and Meghan Markle at Invictus Games
    he appearance of Prince Harry's girlfriend over the weekend at the opening ceremonies of the Invictus Games in Toronto continues to be scrutinized by royal watchers, who have commented on everything from how far they sat from each other to where the American actress purchased her outfit.

    Attention intensifies around Prince Harry and Meghan Markle at Invictus Games

    Prince Harry greets Canadian winners of the Duke of Edinburgh's Awards

    Prince Harry greets Canadian winners of the Duke of Edinburgh's Awards
    The energy Prince Harry generated at the Invictus Games' opening ceremony concert on Saturday night spilled over to Sunday, when the prince met with dozens of high-achieving Canadian youth at the presentation of The Duke of Edinburgh's International Gold Awards.

    Prince Harry greets Canadian winners of the Duke of Edinburgh's Awards

    RCMP say they called off pursuit before crash that killed three women

    RCMP say they called off pursuit before crash that killed three women
    Mounties say they were chasing a stolen truck that crashed into a minivan and killed three Edmonton women, but add they called off the pursuit long before the deadly collision.

    RCMP say they called off pursuit before crash that killed three women