Omar Khadr deserves
government apology and compensation: Editorial
The Canadian government has repeatedly failed Omar Khadr, as the
Supreme Court has demonstrated. It's time it said sorry and compensated him.
https://www.thestar.com/opinion/editorials/2017/03/20/omar-khadr-deserves-government-apology-and-compensation-editorial.html
STAR EDITORIAL BOARD March 20, 2017
In 2015, before becoming prime minister, Justin Trudeau said Omar
Khadr, a Canadian citizen, deserved the protection of Canada’s judicial system.
Two years later, Trudeau’s government appears unwilling to
compensate Khadr for the numerous times Canada withheld that protection from
him.
It’s a shame, not to mention a missed opportunity.
After more than a decade of Ottawa failing its moral and legal
obligations to defend Khadr’s human rights, Trudeau could help right the ship
with a formal apology and financial settlement.
The Toronto-born Khadr was captured in Afghanistan at 15. Accused of
throwing a grenade that killed a U.S. army medic, Khadr spent 13 years behind
bars, most of them at Guantanamo Bay.
Khadr has said that, while in U.S. custody, guards threatened him with
rape, physically abused him and once left him hogtied until he
urinated on himself.
Canadian government reports show that, while at Guantanamo Bay, Khadr
was subjected to sleep deprivation and solitary confinement in an effort to
make him “more amenable and willing to talk.”
More damning still, the reports show Canadian officials knew about the
“enhanced interrogation techniques” but assured the public he was being treated
humanely.
In three separate rulings over the past decade, the Supreme Court of
Canada has determined that the Canadian government acted illegally by sharing
intelligence information about Khadr with the U.S.; violated Khadr’s
constitutional rights by interrogating him at Guantanamo despite knowing he had
been abused; and wrongfully placed Khadr in a federal penitentiary following
his transfer to the Canadian penal system.
Canada’s role in Khadr’s Guantanamo interrogation “offends the most
basic Canadian standards about the treatment of detained youth suspects,” the
Court ruled in 2010.
On Friday, Ottawa announced the settlement of a $100-million lawsuit
filed by Abdullah Almalki, Ahmad Abou-Elmaati and Muayyed Nureddin, three
Muslim Canadian men who were imprisoned at the
height of the War on Terror based in part on Canadian intelligence, and later
tortured by Syrian authorities.
“We hope that the steps taken today will support them and their
families in their efforts to begin a new and hopeful chapter in their lives,”
said Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale and Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia
Freeland in a joint statement.
Khadr and his lawyers have a long-standing $20-million suit against
the Canadian government in relation to his abuse at the hands of foreign
authorities.
But, as the Star’s Michelle Shephard reports, federal lawyers appear
to be settling in for a prolonged court battle.
Khadr’s legal case is complicated. He pled guilty in 2010 to five war
crimes, but has since recanted.
Khadr now says he does not know whether he killed the U.S. medic, and
only confessed to get out of Guantanamo.
He was freed on bail in 2015, and is appealing his conviction — a
process that could take years.
His guilt or innocence is not the issue here, though.
What matters is that, before even being afforded a trial, Khadr was
abused in detention by Canada’s closest ally, with the knowledge of Canadian
officials.
These breaches of government duty occurred before Trudeau’s tenure.
But Friday’s settlement proves the prime minister’s willingness to rightfully
take responsibility for past administrations’ mistakes.
The Canadian government has repeatedly failed Khadr, as the Supreme
Court has demonstrated.
It should stop fighting him, apologize and settle, rather than
litigate, this shameful case.
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