Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) Commissioner Bob Paulson takes part in a news conference with Canada's Public Safety Minister Steven Blaney in Ottawa
Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) Commissioner Bob Paulson (R) takes part in a news conference with Canada's Public Safety Minister Steven Blaney in Ottawa December 1, 2014. Reuters/Chris Wattie

Canada arrested another man in an alleged terrorist conspiracy. The man was arrested at Montreal airport while he was planning to travel to India.

This is the third Ottawa man the Royal Canadian Mounted Police arrested. The RCMP earlier arrested a twin brother on various terrorist conspiracy charges. The 21-year-old man, whom the RCMP arrested on Monday, was identified as Suliman Mohamed. Suliman was charged with participation in the activity of a terrorist group. He was also charged with conspiracy to participate in a terrorist activity with a couple of other men in Ottawa. Carlos Honor Larmond and Ashton Carleton Larmond, the 24-year-old twins who were arrested on Friday, were also charged with several terrorism-related offences. Carlos was arrested at the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Airport in Montreal. He was allegedly travelling overseas for terrorist intentions. However, it was not revealed by the RCMP where he was travelling to. The Telegram reports that The Canadian Press has learned that Carlos was travelling to India. It is, on the other hand, unclear if India was his final destination. Carlos' brother, Ashton, was arrested in Ottawa. He played pickup hockey on a men's team.

According to RCMP Chief Supt Jennifer Strachan, the arrests indicate that some Canadian individuals have been radicalised to a violent ideology, The Guardian reports. There were two "lone wolf" attacks in October in Ottawa. A gunman had stormed the Canadian parliament before he was gunned down. Another gunman killed a soldier at the National War Memorial. Even before the parliament attack, a man ran over a couple of soldiers in a parking lot. The man, who was eventually shot dead by police, had earlier had his passport seized while he tried travelling to Turkey. Canada is a part of the U.S.-led attack in the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria.

Joseph Addelman, the lawyer who is defending the twin brothers, earlier said that the charge against them would be vigorously defended. The brothers are scheduled to appear in court for the second time on Feb. 12. Suliman, on the other hand, was scheduled to appear in court on Tuesday. Not much information was revealed about what exactly the arrested men had done.

Contact the writer: s.mukhopadhyay@IBTimes.com.au