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Gang boss deported to Sri Lanka - Printable Version +- Yarl Forum (https://www.yarl.com/forum2) +-- Forum: கணணிக் களம் (https://www.yarl.com/forum2/forumdisplay.php?fid=10) +--- Forum: பிறமொழி ஆக்கங்கள் (https://www.yarl.com/forum2/forumdisplay.php?fid=50) +--- Thread: Gang boss deported to Sri Lanka (/showthread.php?tid=415) |
Gang boss deported to Sri Lanka - Rasikai - 03-29-2006 <b>Gang boss deported to Sri Lanka</b> <b>Immigration charges followed years of deadly street fighting between rival Tamil groups in '90s Mar. 28, 2006. 04:57 AM MICHELLE SHEPHARD STAFF REPORTER</b> <img src='http://img145.imageshack.us/img145/3001/060328sittampalam3009tp.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image'> VINCE TALOTTA/TORONTO STAR Jothiravi Sittampalam allegedly formed the AK Kannan gang, named after his street name (Kannan, or God) and the AK-47. The reputed leader of a Tamil gang whose battle with rival gang members on the streets of Toronto claimed the lives of more than a dozen youths in the late 1990s, and once led to a midday shooting on Highway 404, was deported late last night to Sri Lanka. Kaileshan Thanabalasingham was one of the main targets of Project 1050, a joint police and immigration investigation that ended with the arrest of close to 51 alleged gang members on Oct. 18, 2001. The majority of the accused were charged under a section of the immigration act that prohibits involvement in a criminal organization, marking the first time street gangs were classified as "organized crime" under immigration laws. Known in Toronto's Tamil community as Kailesh, the 36-year-old father was accused of leading the VVT gang, a west Toronto group that was formed in the early 1990s and named for Valvettithurai, a northern Sri Lankan town. Thanabalasingham denied he led the VVT, or that his criminal convictions — possessing a machete in 1996 and a 1998 conspiracy to commit assault for trying to acquire guns for others — were related to gang membership. A January Immigration and Refugee Board decision that cleared the way for his removal classified both convictions as gang-related and also noted Thanabalasingham was known to visit incarcerated gang members. "It's quite instructive that the appellant took it upon himself to attend court when gang members were charged with criminal offences, to assist in preparing their defence and then visit them in jail when incarcerated. He acted like a shepherd tending to his flock," wrote IRB appeal division member Egya Sangmuah in his Jan. 6 decision. Thanabalasingham's lawyer, Barbara Jackman, had argued that as a Tamil, he would be targeted by the Sri Lankan government if returned home due to media reports that have linked the VVT to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, or LTTE, a guerrilla group fighting the Singhalese government for independence. Sangmuah dismissed claims that Thanabalasingham would face danger. "The Minister (of Immigration) does not allege that the appellant or the VVT is connected to the LTTE," he wrote. "(E)ven if the appellant is wrongly perceived as a member of the LTTE, he will likely not face persecution." Jackman said yesterday she believed her client was being punished unfairly since he had already been sentenced for his criminal activity. "If someone commits a criminal offence, they go to trial, they get a sentence, they get punished for it. Are they ever allowed to overcome it? Yes. In Kailesh's case where his family's all here and he has a clean record since 1998, the board and the minister still think he should be effectively punished," she said. Thanabalasingham came to Canada in July 1991 and was granted refugee status, then became a landed immigrant on Aug. 31, 1992. Police believe he became leader of the VVT in 1997, after the two former alleged leaders, Sri Ranjan Rasa and Niranjan Claude Fabian, were arrested (the men remain in Canada fighting their deportation). VVT's primary target was rival AK Kannan, whose stronghold was in Scarborough. Police allege Jothiravi Sittampalam formed that group, naming it after his street name (Kannan, meaning God) and his love for the AK-47 assault weapon. Before his incarceration he had more than one attempt on his life including the incident in April 2001 when his car was surrounded on an off-ramp of Highway 404 and VVT members opened fire, only slightly injuring him. One of the gangs' most high-profile crimes occurred in December 1997, when suspected VVT members shot at a doughnut shop that was a known AK Kannan hangout, killing Kapilan Palasanthiran, an innocent University of Waterloo student, and injuring two others. During a series of retaliatory crimes, a gang member was seriously injured in 2000 after he was run over by a car, followed by an attack on occupants of a car idling at a Kennedy Rd. address in Scarborough. It was again a case of mistaken identity and two Tamil teenagers not connected to the gangs were killed. "For three years the Tamil community was held hostage by two gangs vying for control in Toronto," said Det. Sgt. Greg Getty, head of Project 1050, in an interview yesterday before Thanabalasingham was escorted on a 10:40 p.m. flight out of Toronto. "If he does get deported, it's a great day for the Tamil community." Only 10 of the 51 alleged gang members arrested in 2001 have been deported. They include AK Kannan's reputed senior member, 33-year-old Panchalingam Nagalingam, who was deported in December. Panchan, as he was known in the community, was often referred to as an AK Kannan enforcer. Police sometimes called him "the cat" for his ability to cheat death. Before his arrest in December 2000, bullets narrowly missed his baby son and girlfriend. Through the media, he told the shooters to leave his family alone and to deal with him instead. In March the next year, he was shot six times as he left the Mimico Detention Centre, where he was serving a sentence on weekends. When interviewed by the Star that summer Nagalingam said he had "no idea" why he was targeted. Another senior member associated with the VVT was deported in January. Jeyaseelan Thuraisingam, known on the street as Seelapu, was deported after his final court appeal for protection was thrown out. Sittampalam, the alleged 35-year-old leader of AK Kannan, remains in Canada awaiting a final federal court appeal. Unlike Thanabalasingham, who paid a $55,000 cash bond in January 2004, with a promise of $40,000 more if he violated bail conditions, Sittampalam has remained in custody since his 2001 arrest. "These are largely permanent residents and people whom Canada has granted protection from persecution and the threshold for deportation is much higher," said Canadian Border and Security Agency spokesperson Anna Pape yesterday, explaining the time it takes for these cases to work their way through immigration and court appeals. "Just because it's a lengthy process doesn't mean it's not worth pursuing. The real success of this project lies at the community level. It's meaningful to Canadians because our efforts are resulting in the dismantling of a network of organized criminals and resulting in a large reduction of local crime." After the arrests four and a half years ago, many in Toronto's Tamil community said they breathed a sigh of relief and there was a noticeable dip in crime in Tamil neighbourhoods. But lately some new youths are attempting to fill the void. Police sources say that while the violence has not reached the level it was in the 1990s, Tamil youth groups calling themselves names such as the MCF (Money Comes First), Bravehearts or TBT (True Brown Thugs), are starting to build up their ranks. http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentSe...ol=968342212737 - கந்தப்பு - 03-29-2006 முன்பும் கனடாவிலிருந்து நாடு கடத்தப்பட்ட அடிதடி கொஸ்டியினர் பிறகு இலங்கை அரசாங்கத்தின் உதவியுடன் லண்டனுக்கு போனார்கள் என்று பரபரப்பிலையும், ஒரு பேப்பரிலையும் செய்தி வந்தது இப்ப யாபகம் வருகிறது. - putthan - 03-29-2006 என்ன கந்தப்பு வயது போனா எழுதவும் வரவில்லை போல ஞாபகத்திற்கு என்னவோ உளறி இருக்கிறீர். - கந்தப்பு - 03-30-2006 putthan Wrote:என்ன கந்தப்பு வயது போனா எழுதவும் வரவில்லை போல ஞாபகத்திற்கு என்னவோ உளறி இருக்கிறீர். நான் உளரவில்லை. இங்கே பார்க்கவும். http://www.orupaper.com/issue26/pages_K__26.pdf http://www.orupaper.com/issue26/pages_K__30.pdf |