The Canadians in Hamas: The operative, leader and financier

Hephaestus

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Usama Ali is an alleged Hamas operative, leader and financier.

He is also Canadian.

And so are others in the Palestinian terrorist group that killed 1,200 and took more than 200 hostages on Oct. 7, 2023, Global News has learned.

About 450 people with assorted roles in Hamas have ties to Canada, according to a source familiar with the intelligence on the matter.

The source, who spoke on the condition of not being identified, said the list was comprised of permanent residents, as well as those with family or associates in Canada.

But it also included citizens like Ali, an alleged member of the Hamas executive team who runs the terror group’s financial office.

The figure dates to the time of the Hamas attack on Israel that brought the Middle East to the brink of regional war and may no longer be so high, the source added.

The Israeli offensive in Gaza has killed tens of thousands, and airstrikes have targeted the Hamas leadership in Lebanon, Iran and Qatar.

As Gaza’s de facto government, Hamas controlled a broad array of institutions for almost two decades, and many residents could have therefore had dealings with the group out of necessity.

But the number said to have been active in the organization in various capacities, and connected to Canada, is significant and includes a top leader.

The Canadian Security Intelligence Service confirmed it was investigating Canadians in Middle East terror groups, but declined to elaborate.

Hamas is a listed terrorist entity in Canada, making it illegal to participate in or contribute to “any activity” of the group, which Public Safety Canada calls a “radical Islamist-nationalist terrorist organization.”

“The government of Canada must act urgently to confront the threat posed by Hamas-linked individuals, both to prevent attacks on Canadian soil and to ensure Canada is not exploited to facilitate terrorism abroad,” said Noah Shack, CEO of the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs.

“Participation in a banned terrorist group must bring real consequences. Canadians deserve to be protected from terrorist threats.”

A leading expert on Hamas said the 450 number was plausible and that other western countries also accounted for significant numbers.

“It doesn’t surprise me,” said Matthew Levitt, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “This will include people at all kinds of levels.”

They would range from full Hamas members to those who served in government in some capacity when it was led by the terror group, Levitt said.

Holding foreign citizenship offers advantages for groups like Hamas, such as easier movement across borders and consular protection, he said.

“Having a foreign passport, especially a western passport, is a ticket to travel,” said Levitt, author of the book Hamas: Politics, Charity and Terrorism in the Service of Jihad.

he most senior Canadian in Hamas is a 63-year-old with a trim grey beard who also holds Lebanese citizenship and goes by the names Usama Ali, Radwan and Rizwan, among others.

U.S. sanctions levied against him in 2022 list three Canadian passports he has used. While his current whereabouts are unknown, the branch he allegedly runs is based in Turkey.

Details of Ali’s life in Canada are unclear, but the U.S. Treasury Department has alleged that in 2017, he was appointed head of the Hamas Investment Office.

Originally in Saudi Arabia, the investment office relocated to Turkey and accumulated an estimated US$500 million in assets, including construction and real estate companies.

The businesses spanned Africa and the Middle East and were used to hide money, generate revenue and bankroll Hamas, according to the Treasury Department statement.

“It’s a strategic long-term investment,” said Levitt, a former U.S. Treasury official. “You are living off the income that the companies are generating.”

On paper, Ali had no role in the companies but “was involved in their business activities,” and co-ordinated “financial transfers to Hamas,” the statement alleged.

However, Ali’s deputy, Hisham Younis Yahia Qafisheh, a Jordanian, held “key roles” in the Hamas-controlled businesses, the statement added.

He was deputy chair of Trend GYO, a Turkish development company, which has denied supporting Hamas. He was also chair and director of development companies in Sudan, according to the allegations.

The Hamas investment office covertly held additional assets in companies in Algeria and the United Arab Emirates, the treasury statement said.

A significant portion of company funds went to the Hamas military wing, the Al-Qassam Brigades, which led the Oct. 7 attack, it added.

In 2019, Ali became a member of the Shura Council, a consultative body that elects Hamas executives and shapes the terror group’s strategies and policies.

He also served on the Executive Committee, the main Hamas decision-making body, which was led by political leader Ismail Haniyeh, according to the U.S. and Israel.

Ali “maintained direct contact with senior Hamas leaders,” including Haniyeh, deputy chief Salih al-Aruri and financial official Zahar Jabarin, Israeli authorities alleged.

Following the October 2023 attack, the Treasury Department imposed additional sanctions on the Hamas investment wing and a list of financial facilitators.

“The companies in Hamas’s portfolio have operated under the guise of legitimate businesses and their representatives have attempted to conceal Hamas’s control over their assets,” the announcement said.

“This investment network is directed by the highest levels of Hamas leadership and has allowed Hamas senior officials to live in luxury while ordinary Palestinians in Gaza struggle in harsh living and economic conditions.”

Haniyeh was assassinated in Tehran in July 2024, while al-Aruri was killed in Beirut. There has been no public notice that Ali has died, and the Israeli defense ministry declined to comment on his status.

But not all those who have been associated with Hamas are as high-ranking, nor do they even live in the Middle East.

One is allegedly from Winnipeg.

n May 22, 2025, Israeli forces struck a business in Gaza City accused of storing and transferring millions of dollars for Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad.

The Dubai Money Exchange had been a target of Israeli counter-terrorism officials since 2022, when it was sanctioned over a cryptocurrency scheme that moved money for Hamas.

The company was unrelated to the city of Dubai. Rather, it was located in Gaza and run by Khader Dan, “a prominent money exchanger in the service of Hamas,” the Israeli government alleged in its sanctions listing.

Dan’s operation was a “significant part of Hamas’ economic infrastructure,” according to an announcement by Israel’s National Bureau for Counter Terror Financing.

As part of their crackdown on Hamas financing, Israeli authorities seized about 600 digital “wallets” they alleged were associated with the Dubai exchange.

One of them was traced to Canada. It allegedly belonged to Omar Alkassab, a Syrian who had arrived in Winnipeg as a refugee in 2016 and worked as a house painter.

The Israeli paperwork on the seizure of Alkassab’s crypto account lists a Manitoba phone number and an email address associated with a Winnipeg residence.

When a Global News reporter visited the bungalow, the person who answered the door said he did not know Alkassab. Neither Alkassab nor his lawyer responded to emails.

According to his immigration records, Alkassab is from the Syrian city of Al-Bab and worked in nearby Aleppo as a delivery driver for Coca Cola.

A LinkedIn account that has now been deleted said that in Syria he “rescued people buried under rubble from airstrikes,” and was project manager for a humanitarian group called Omar’s Helping Hands.

As Syria spiralled into civil war and fell to ISIS, Alkassab moved with his parents and siblings to Ankara, Turkey, and then to Canada.

After three years in Winnipeg, he applied for Canadian citizenship in 2019 and passed the test in 2021, but he is still awaiting a decision.

The details of how his Gaza crypto account was used are not publicly available, nor are explanations for why a Manitoba resident would need a crypto wallet in the Palestinian territory.

An expert said the seized wallets could belong to “money mules” who use their cryptocurrency accounts to convert digital currency into cash in quantities below the limits flagged for money laundering.

“It’s one way people try to cover their tracks,” said Andreas Park, a University of Toronto at Mississauga finance professor.

Levitt said donors could have had other reasons for wanting to send cryptocurrency through a Gaza exchange, including for altruistic, humanitarian purposes.

“Is it possible that you have a Syrian trying to become a Canadian who wants to give money to needy people in Gaza and that’s why he has it? Yes,” he said.

“Why is it going through this particular Hamas-affiliated financial institution? Is there another way to do it? Can anybody open up accounts there?”

“Those are things authorities are going to need to investigate.”

he Canadian government launched an investigation into Alkassab in May 2022, a month after the Israelis seized his crypto wallet, internal government documents show.

His citizenship application was suspended and four federal agencies are looking into his background, according to the records released to Global News by the Federal Court.

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada has categorized it as a national security matter, and brought in the RCMP, Canadian Security Intelligence Service and Canada Border Services Agency, the file indicates.

The CSIS Security Screening Branch sent its assessment report on Alkassab to immigration officials on Jan. 16, 2025. It was heavily redacted prior to being publicly released but flagged his Gaza crypto wallet.

“According to publicly available information on the website of the National Bureau for Counter Terror Financing of the Israeli government, Alkassab is the owner of a Binance cryptocurrency wallet believed to be the property of Dubai Company for Exchange in the Gaza Strip,” CSIS wrote in its report.

“The NBCTF has designated Dubai Company for Exchange as a terrorist organization.”




 

southpaw

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Coochy

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Usama Ali is an alleged Hamas operative, leader and financier.

He is also Canadian.

And so are others in the Palestinian terrorist group that killed 1,200 and took more than 200 hostages on Oct. 7, 2023, Global News has learned.

About 450 people with assorted roles in Hamas have ties to Canada, according to a source familiar with the intelligence on the matter.

Right, he's Canadian like Frank is Canadian. (y)
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
86,025
130,047
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'Son of Hamas' warns about Islamism's creeping hold on West


Mosab Hassan Yousef is a rare voice to emerge from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict: a man whose journey took him from the dark pit of Hamas, to an outspoken critic and bestselling author.

Born in Ramallah in 1978, Yousef is the eldest son of Sheikh Hassan Yousef, one of the founding leaders of Hamas, the terror group that rose to dominate Gaza. Growing up steeped in Jihadist ideology, he was expected to inherit his father’s legacy — until a crisis of conscience set him on a radically different course.




more

His transformation began in the late 1990s, after witnessing the brutality inflicted by his own peers on suspected “collaborators.” Disillusioned, he accepted an unlikely recruitment by Shin Bet, Israel’s internal security agency, agreeing to act as an informant under the code name “The Green Prince.” Over the next decade, he worked undercover to sabotage terror plots and, by his own accounts, helped save hundreds of lives — including fellow Palestinians, as much as Israelis. All this transpired while his father remained a leading Hamas figure — that ultimately forced Yousef into exile and estrangement.

His story exploded onto the world stage with the publication of his bestselling memoir, Son of Hamas, in 2010. More recently, he expanded his story, in From Hamas to America, chronicling his years as an American citizen, reflecting on the cost and complexity of his choices, which include a conversion to Christianity.




more

Tafsik, a pro-Israel organization, brought Yousef to speak in Toronto on Nov. 19.

He spoke of recent Palestinian flag raisings in Toronto, Calgary and Winnipeg, excoriating Canadian politicians as “hypocrites looking for votes” who are “supporting chaos and terrorism.” Local demonstrators against Israel are “spitting venom, taking advantage of Gaza’s tragedy” while “using your freedoms to destroy your freedoms.”

He spoke of being raised in a “death culture” where “women are treated like cattle, as property” and “they feed children from an early age how to hate, in the name of resistance and occupation.”

He called Islamists “savages” that cannot be negotiated with. He said they perpetuated an “inverted narrative” that used projection to accuse Israel of genocide and colonization, but they were guilty of those very crimes.

Yousef spoke with Dave Gordon for National Post:




more

Q: On a governmental level, what needs to be done to prevent more antisemitic incidents?

A:
The problem with the government of Canada, is they have been platforming Palestine. This is the biggest antisemitism out there – rewarding Palestinians for their violence, then expecting from such a government to actually be fair to the Jews.

They are appeasing Muslim voters, and there is going to be consequences. (The government is) legitimizing jihad against all Western values.

If they continue to choose to close their eyes and see it differently, then they are part of the problem. They are not part of the solution.

I don’t count on them being fair to the Jewish people, and their fight against antisemitism. How can this be possible, when they are raising Palestinian flags, in their capitals?


Q: Would you say that the Gazans were unique, in that, as a group, they were for decades subjected to daily jihadist messages by Hamas?

A:
Actually, some of the most dangerous terrorists that the West ever experienced came from very wealthy Arab oil countries like Saudi Arabia. The only difference (with Gaza) is poverty, and that they are very close to the Jews. Like, for example, if Pakistan was close by, jihad would not be limited to the Palestinians.

Terrorists, jihadists, are worldwide. What we saw, for example, in Syria, remember ISIS? Remember what happened just recently against the Druze in Syria? See what the Houthis are doing. See the barbarism of the Iraqis, for example, during the Shia-Sunni clashes. But of course, there were no headlines. Take Algeria also. I can go on and on. Look at Sudan recently.


What I’m trying to tell you is that the entire region is ruled by tribalism. This is not only unique for the Palestinians. It’s a death culture. They just find in Israel a common enemy, because they are Jews. But practically, if they don’t have the Jews to kill, they will kill each other.

Q: From time to time, Gazans will say things against Hamas on camera. Is this genuine, and how prevalent is that sentiment?

A:
Hamas ruled over the Gazans for 17 years, and they made many enemies, they killed many people, and they oppressed their political rivals.

They imprisoned them, they killed them, and these people basically are still there, and they have a blood feud with Hamas. So now Hamas has enemies. There are tribes who actually oppose Hamas, and they are armed, and they are defending themselves. There are so many divisions and subdivisions within the Gaza Strip.


But as of now, I think the vast majority of Gazans, they don’t see Israel as a possible peace partner, and they don’t recognize Israel. They still want a Palestinian state on the rubble of Israel.

Q: There is a sense among many that a large-scale terror attack is imminent in the West. Do you agree?

A:
First of all, the jihadis, the extreme Muslims, they are thinking, ‘Oh, it’s a political win. The political win is better than the military win.’ I’m not saying it’s better. What I’m saying is, to them, right now, they are winning.

They always will come to a point where they choose violence. For now, I call it, diplomatic, political and financial jihad. This is something you must understand about how the Muslim Brotherhood works, which is basically the main mover and shaker behind all this chaos in the West.


Social jihad, which is what you experience on social media, is also significant in this game. As long as the jihadis are looking like freedom fighters, and the Jews are looking like terrorists, they are not going to go and do something that is going to actually change the narrative, or change the price.

But you need to take into consideration the lone wolves. Those are the ones that are basically not under control, and they take hateful indoctrination literally, and they may act on it.

We have more mayors being elected by social media. They also can now use these accounts to manipulate Americans and manipulate Westerners to get to power.

This is, in my opinion, a lot more dangerous than just a terrorist attack that would unify Westerners. If this continues, then eventually they are going to take over politics, controlling Congress or Parliament, to gain more power in decision-making circles.


Q: A three-piece-suit jihad?

A:
Yes, and especially when they are funded right now by Qatari money. I actually am not seeing an immediate threat of the magnitude of 9/11. I don’t see it in the interest of the Muslim Brotherhood, or any of its branches. 9/11 unified the West against terrorism, and October 7 divided the West, and this was the entire Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood strategy, basically, to demoralize the West, and they succeeded.

Q: What do you think allies of Israel and the Jewish people need to do?

A:
Defend freedom; defend the West, counter the Islamist threat, that has an aspiration to conquer the world. Once people start to understand that this is a real and existential threat, and they understand their strategy, financial, social, and diplomatic jihad, then it becomes a different story.


If the West is not united, say Christians, Hindus, Buddhists, all types of people, then everybody is a target.

The Jihadists are going to be violent, and anyone who would oppose them or offends their religion or criticizes their religion, they are going to kill and kidnap and commit terrorism.

This is paving the way for a new generation. Right now it’s like a cancer; it’s a big problem that nobody actually knows how to deal with.

What we need is to bring the truth to the people. For example, all the allegations of occupation, of genocide, of colonization, of stealing the land from the Palestinians, these are baseless accusations. And they are very serious accusations. We need to shed light on how the Gaza tragedy was the outcome of Hamas weaponizing civilians.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
103,740
29,921
113
'Son of Hamas' warns about Islamism's creeping hold on West


Mosab Hassan Yousef is a rare voice to emerge from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict: a man whose journey took him from the dark pit of Hamas, to an outspoken critic and bestselling author.

Born in Ramallah in 1978, Yousef is the eldest son of Sheikh Hassan Yousef, one of the founding leaders of Hamas, the terror group that rose to dominate Gaza. Growing up steeped in Jihadist ideology, he was expected to inherit his father’s legacy — until a crisis of conscience set him on a radically different course.




more

His transformation began in the late 1990s, after witnessing the brutality inflicted by his own peers on suspected “collaborators.” Disillusioned, he accepted an unlikely recruitment by Shin Bet, Israel’s internal security agency, agreeing to act as an informant under the code name “The Green Prince.” Over the next decade, he worked undercover to sabotage terror plots and, by his own accounts, helped save hundreds of lives — including fellow Palestinians, as much as Israelis. All this transpired while his father remained a leading Hamas figure — that ultimately forced Yousef into exile and estrangement.

His story exploded onto the world stage with the publication of his bestselling memoir, Son of Hamas, in 2010. More recently, he expanded his story, in From Hamas to America, chronicling his years as an American citizen, reflecting on the cost and complexity of his choices, which include a conversion to Christianity.




more

Tafsik, a pro-Israel organization, brought Yousef to speak in Toronto on Nov. 19.

He spoke of recent Palestinian flag raisings in Toronto, Calgary and Winnipeg, excoriating Canadian politicians as “hypocrites looking for votes” who are “supporting chaos and terrorism.” Local demonstrators against Israel are “spitting venom, taking advantage of Gaza’s tragedy” while “using your freedoms to destroy your freedoms.”

He spoke of being raised in a “death culture” where “women are treated like cattle, as property” and “they feed children from an early age how to hate, in the name of resistance and occupation.”

He called Islamists “savages” that cannot be negotiated with. He said they perpetuated an “inverted narrative” that used projection to accuse Israel of genocide and colonization, but they were guilty of those very crimes.

Yousef spoke with Dave Gordon for National Post:




more

Q: On a governmental level, what needs to be done to prevent more antisemitic incidents?

A:
The problem with the government of Canada, is they have been platforming Palestine. This is the biggest antisemitism out there – rewarding Palestinians for their violence, then expecting from such a government to actually be fair to the Jews.

They are appeasing Muslim voters, and there is going to be consequences. (The government is) legitimizing jihad against all Western values.

If they continue to choose to close their eyes and see it differently, then they are part of the problem. They are not part of the solution.

I don’t count on them being fair to the Jewish people, and their fight against antisemitism. How can this be possible, when they are raising Palestinian flags, in their capitals?


Q: Would you say that the Gazans were unique, in that, as a group, they were for decades subjected to daily jihadist messages by Hamas?

A:
Actually, some of the most dangerous terrorists that the West ever experienced came from very wealthy Arab oil countries like Saudi Arabia. The only difference (with Gaza) is poverty, and that they are very close to the Jews. Like, for example, if Pakistan was close by, jihad would not be limited to the Palestinians.

Terrorists, jihadists, are worldwide. What we saw, for example, in Syria, remember ISIS? Remember what happened just recently against the Druze in Syria? See what the Houthis are doing. See the barbarism of the Iraqis, for example, during the Shia-Sunni clashes. But of course, there were no headlines. Take Algeria also. I can go on and on. Look at Sudan recently.


What I’m trying to tell you is that the entire region is ruled by tribalism. This is not only unique for the Palestinians. It’s a death culture. They just find in Israel a common enemy, because they are Jews. But practically, if they don’t have the Jews to kill, they will kill each other.

Q: From time to time, Gazans will say things against Hamas on camera. Is this genuine, and how prevalent is that sentiment?

A:
Hamas ruled over the Gazans for 17 years, and they made many enemies, they killed many people, and they oppressed their political rivals.

They imprisoned them, they killed them, and these people basically are still there, and they have a blood feud with Hamas. So now Hamas has enemies. There are tribes who actually oppose Hamas, and they are armed, and they are defending themselves. There are so many divisions and subdivisions within the Gaza Strip.


But as of now, I think the vast majority of Gazans, they don’t see Israel as a possible peace partner, and they don’t recognize Israel. They still want a Palestinian state on the rubble of Israel.

Q: There is a sense among many that a large-scale terror attack is imminent in the West. Do you agree?

A:
First of all, the jihadis, the extreme Muslims, they are thinking, ‘Oh, it’s a political win. The political win is better than the military win.’ I’m not saying it’s better. What I’m saying is, to them, right now, they are winning.

They always will come to a point where they choose violence. For now, I call it, diplomatic, political and financial jihad. This is something you must understand about how the Muslim Brotherhood works, which is basically the main mover and shaker behind all this chaos in the West.


Social jihad, which is what you experience on social media, is also significant in this game. As long as the jihadis are looking like freedom fighters, and the Jews are looking like terrorists, they are not going to go and do something that is going to actually change the narrative, or change the price.

But you need to take into consideration the lone wolves. Those are the ones that are basically not under control, and they take hateful indoctrination literally, and they may act on it.

We have more mayors being elected by social media. They also can now use these accounts to manipulate Americans and manipulate Westerners to get to power.

This is, in my opinion, a lot more dangerous than just a terrorist attack that would unify Westerners. If this continues, then eventually they are going to take over politics, controlling Congress or Parliament, to gain more power in decision-making circles.


Q: A three-piece-suit jihad?

A:
Yes, and especially when they are funded right now by Qatari money. I actually am not seeing an immediate threat of the magnitude of 9/11. I don’t see it in the interest of the Muslim Brotherhood, or any of its branches. 9/11 unified the West against terrorism, and October 7 divided the West, and this was the entire Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood strategy, basically, to demoralize the West, and they succeeded.

Q: What do you think allies of Israel and the Jewish people need to do?

A:
Defend freedom; defend the West, counter the Islamist threat, that has an aspiration to conquer the world. Once people start to understand that this is a real and existential threat, and they understand their strategy, financial, social, and diplomatic jihad, then it becomes a different story.


If the West is not united, say Christians, Hindus, Buddhists, all types of people, then everybody is a target.

The Jihadists are going to be violent, and anyone who would oppose them or offends their religion or criticizes their religion, they are going to kill and kidnap and commit terrorism.

This is paving the way for a new generation. Right now it’s like a cancer; it’s a big problem that nobody actually knows how to deal with.

What we need is to bring the truth to the people. For example, all the allegations of occupation, of genocide, of colonization, of stealing the land from the Palestinians, these are baseless accusations. And they are very serious accusations. We need to shed light on how the Gaza tragedy was the outcome of Hamas weaponizing civilians.
AIPAC thinks people will believe that its the Muslim Brotherhood that is controlling things?
that's funny
 

K Douglas

Half Man Half Amazing
Jan 5, 2005
29,741
11,179
113
Room 112
Not shocking since Mississauga is Little Palestine.
 
Ashley Madison
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