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Canadian
immigration
officials
arrested
Sebastian
Seeman,
a pro-
LTTE
Indian
film
director
in
Toronto
yesterday
after he
gave a
fiery
speech
at an
event
where
the flag
of the
outlawed
LTTE was
flown.
Seeman,
who was
in
Canada
on a
speaking
tour,
was
taken
into
custody
by
Canada
Border
Services
Agency
officers
and
questioned
before
agreeing
to leave
the
country
immediately,
the
National
Post
reported.
A CBSA
spokeswoman,
Patricia
Giolti,
confirmed
the
arrest,
and his
lawyer
Hadayt
Nazami
said
immigration
officials
had
intended
to
deport
him on
security
grounds
unless
he left
voluntarily.
He
departed
Canada
on
Thursday
night.
The film
director
from
Tamil
Nadu is
known
for his
hardline
speeches
in
support
of LTTE.
During
his
speech
in
Toronto
on
Wednesday,
he
talked
about
restarting
the
civil
war in
Sri
Lanka,
according
to
several
Tamil-Canadians
who
heard it
on the
radio or
watched
it on
the
Internet.
He also
spoke
harshly
about
the
ethnic
Sinhalese
who are
the
majority
in Sri
Lanka.
"No
Singhala
can
live,"
he said,
according
to the
witnesses.
He also
said the
war
would
have
ended
differently
had the
LTTE
bombed
100
Sinhalese
schools.
In the
video of
his
speech,
a flag
bearing
the
militaristic
emblem
of the
LTTE,
can be
seen in
the
room.
The LTTE
is a
banned
terrorist
organization
under
Canadian
law.
RCMP
officers
and
members
of the
Toronto
and Peel
police
services
were
involved
in
Seeman's
arrest,
which
comes as
police
are
cracking
down on
the pro-LTTE
events
that
were
once
common
in
Toronto.
Police
have
been
investigating
LTTE
activities
in
Toronto,
Montreal
and
Vancouver
since
2002.
The
investigation
concluded
that
pro-LTTE
groups
in
Canada
had
funneled
millions
of
dollars
to the
organization.
RCMP
Commissioner
William
Elliott
said in
a speech
last
month
that
while
the Sri
Lankan
insurgency
had
ended,
the LTTE
remained
a
terrorist
group
that
could
have a
significant
impact
in
Canada.
"There
are an
estimated
250,000
Tamils
in this
country,
more
than
anywhere
else in
the
world
outside
of Sri
Lanka.
Canada
is one
of the
few
places
in the
world
where
LTTE
terrorists
and
supporters
might
seek to
hide in
plain
sight,
and
potentially
launch
terrorist
activities,"
he said.
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