Canada classifies right-wing Proud Boys as terrorist group

Authorities in Canada on Wednesday, February 3, designated the far-right Proud Boys movement as a terrorist group.
Public Safety Minister Bill Blair said the decision was
influenced by the movement's “pivotal role” in the riots that took place on
January 6 at Congressional headquarters in Washington, DC.
The classification allows for the freezing of the group’s
assets, and its members can be charged with terrorist crimes if they engage in
acts of violence.
The group is made up of men only, is anti-immigrant, and has
a history of violent political confrontations.
The Proud Boys promote ideas embraced by former US President
Donald Trump, who mentioned the group's name during the first US presidential
debate in October 2020.
In response to a question about the issue of white supremacy
and the activity of armed groups, Trump said, “Proud Boys, back off and
prepare,” which the group's online members viewed as a call to action. After
that, Trump distanced himself from the group.
Canada’s designation of the Proud Boys as a terrorist group
comes one week after the US Department of Homeland Security warned of a
“growing threat” of domestic terrorism by violent extremists unhappy with the
outcome of the presidential election.
In Canada, Blair spoke of the “growing threat of ideological
violent extremism.” The Canadian branches of the Proud Boys were seen as
reflecting divergent and disorganized ideas.
Despite strict travel restrictions between the United States
and Canada, at least two Canadians took part in the storming of the Capitol
building last month, according to media reports. Photos and videos of the riots
that took place on January 6 show at least one Canadian flag carried by a
person among the intruders.
Canada is the first country to designate the Proud Boys as a
terrorist group. Two American neo-Nazi groups, Atomwaffen Division and The Base,
as well as several groups affiliated with ISIS and al-Qaeda, have also been
classified as terrorist entities.
The Canadian government indicated that its security services
closely monitor the organization and collect evidence to support the
blacklisting of the organization.
On January 26, the Canadian parliament unanimously approved
a proposal calling on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to ban the Proud Boys
organization in Canada as a terrorist entity.
The proposal urges the Trudeau government to use all
available means to counter the spread of extremist groups, starting with the
immediate classification of the Proud Boys as a terrorist entity.
On January 21, NBC reported the arrest of Joseph Biggs, the
organizer of the Proud Boys group, on charges of being involved in the storming
of the Capitol building in Washington on January 6.
The network indicated that Biggs was identified through
multiple videos and photos that documented the charges against him, according
to a criminal complaint signed by the FBI, which is following the case.
It added that the charges indicated that Biggs was one of
the first to enter the Capitol building, through a door opened by a small group
that entered by breaking a window with a police shield.
The network indicated that Biggs admitted in the
investigations that he had entered the Capitol building.
On January 28, Reuters revealed that Proud Boys leader
Enrique Tarrio had a past as an informant for federal and local law enforcement
authorities and had repeatedly worked in secret with investigators after his
arrest in 2012.
At the hearing in Miami, the FBI said Tarrio's work helped
authorities prosecute more than a dozen people in various cases related to
drugs, gambling and human trafficking.
The former federal prosecutor in the Tarrio case, Vanessa
Singh Johannes, also asserted that he “collaborated with local and federal law
enforcement authorities to assist in the prosecution of those who run other
separate criminal enterprises.”
In an interview with Reuters on Tuesday, Tarrio denied
working in secret or cooperating in cases against others, and when asked about
the court minutes that confirm this information, he said, “I have no knowledge
of this information and I do not remember it.”
Two of the most prominent members of the Proud Boys, Nicholas
Ochs and Nicholas DeCarlo, are facing new charges of conspiracy related to the
riots at the US Congress, the Justice Department announced on Wednesday.
On February 4, the Justice Department unveiled the new
charges of conspiracy in a federal grand jury indictment against Ochs and
DeCarlo.
According to the indictment, the two conspired to prevent
Congress from ratifying President Joe Biden's election victory on January 6,
2021.
Prosecutors said they planned and raised money for that
purpose and then came to Washington and stormed the Congress building as part
of the violent mobilization, according to a copy of the indictment obtained by
CNN.
Earlier Wednesday, Canada announced that the Proud Boys
would be classified as a terrorist entity, along with 12 other groups.
It will be considered a “violent extremist group with ideological motives,” along with three other groups. It is noteworthy that there is no US law to designate an entirely local group as a terrorist organization.