OMAR Khadr, 28, was on Thursday granted bail by Justice Myra Bielby of the Alberta Court of Appeal. The judge upheld the ruling from a lower court that the federal government wanted stayed.
Khadr will have to wear an electronic monitoring device and observe curfew from 10 p.m. to 7 a.m. Internet access will be restricted and must be monitored and supervised. He can only contact his family by telephone or video under his lawyer Dennis Edney’s supervision and the chat must be in English. He can only have in-person visits with his family with prior approval from bail supervisor.
Khadr has to live with Edney and wife Patricia in Edmonton. He cannot leave Alberta without prior approval, except to visit Edneys’ vacation home in B.C.
The federal government continued with its anti-Khadr propaganda with a spokesperson for Public Safety Minister Steven Blaney expressing disappointment at the court’s ruling.
SO what is the TRUTH about Khadr?
In my Rattan’s Rumble column in July 2014 in a piece titled “Harper should leave Omar Khadr alone!” I had explained the whole case.
Here is what I wrote back then:
MEAN-SPIRITED Prime Minister Stephen Harper needs to reform his soul and stop his dirty rightwing propaganda and tactics that are doing nothing good for him or his party – or Canada.
His continuing interference in the Omar Khadr case is nothing but disgusting. I have written extensively on this topic over the years.
Toronto-born Khadr, now 27, was just 15 years old when he was captured in Afghanistan by American troops after a firefight in 2002 and he was returned to Canada in 2012. Harper disgraced himself internationally by dragging his feet in bringing him back to Canada.
Canadian Bar Association President J. Parker MacCarthy rebuked Harper back in 2008 in a stinging letter on behalf of that body: “Canada is the only western country with a citizen still detained at Guantanamo. Both Australia and the U.K. acted to repatriate their detained citizens. It is not enough to accept assurances from the U.S. government that “due process” is being followed. This situation demands immediate action on behalf of the Canadian government.”
In 2012, the CBC reported: “Dr. Steven Xenakis, a U.S. Army psychiatrist who spent more than 200 hours with Khadr since 2008 assessing him for his military defence, has said he is no threat to Canadian society.”
CBC also reported that Arlette Zinck, an English professor at Edmonton’s King University’s College, who had spent almost two years tutoring Khadr said that her institution would welcome him as a student and that he “stands a very good chance of making a significant positive contribution to Canadian life.”
She added: “He’s a very capable and very appreciative student who desires to learn in a more traditional setting.”
Last October, Alberta Associate Chief Justice John Rooke ruled that Khadr would remain at Edmonton’s maximum-security penitentiary. The federal government had argued that Khadr was given eight years as a youth for murder and the sentences on the other four offences were to be served concurrently as an adult.
Khadr’s lawyer Dennis Edney had argued that he should be treated as a young offender and moved to a provincial jail. He had called the government’s position an “absurdity” and had filed an affidavit from a U.S. military law expert stating that there’s no such thing as concurrent sentences in their law books.
Edney had explained the whole situation this way: “It requires a determination be made whether the sentence he received in Guantanamo, if it occurred here in Canada, would be treated as a youth sentence. And we say yes.”
Harper was so shameless that even before the judge gave his ruling, he actually said at a news conference: “This is an individual who, as you know, pled guilty to very serious crimes including murder and it is very important that we continue to vigorously defend against any attempts, in court, to lessen his punishment for these heinous acts.”
Harper should have kept his mouth shut instead of trying to influence the judge.
THIS week Harper received a slap in the face from the Alberta Court of Appeal that ordered Khadr to be transferred to a provincial jail. The court in its unanimous decision said: “We conclude that Khadr ought to have been placed in a provincial correctional facility for adults.”
Edney quite rightly in a statement said that the federal government would “rather pander to politics than to apply the rule of law fairly to each and every Canadian citizen.”
He added: “This government chose to misinterpret the International Transfer of Offenders Act and place Omar in a maximum security prison, where he spent the first seven months in solitary confinement, instead treating him as a youth as required under both Canadian and international law.”
The Globe and Mail newspaper in an editorial titled, “Every Canadian deserves justice. Even Omar Khadr,” noted: “Mr. Khadr was sentenced by a kangaroo court [in the U.S.], one worthy of a Middle Eastern dictatorship or Kafka short story. Or as the Alberta Court of Appeal put it this week, in drily damning language, “the legal process under which Khadr was held and the evidence elicited from him have been found to have violated both the Charter and international human rights law.” The Supreme Court of Canada has also said as much.”
It concluded: “There are some who seem to believe that treating Mr. Khadr anything other than harshly is an appeasement of terrorism, or a spit in the face of our American allies, or a shot against our brave soldiers who fought in Afghanistan. But what were we fighting for in Afghanistan except the hope that others might one day live in a society like ours: A society built on justice and the rule of law.”
The Toronto Star in its editorial titled, “Ottawa’s spiteful treatment of Omar Khadr is a travesty of justice,” lambasted Harper left, right and centre.
It noted: “Omar Khadr has spent nearly half his life in prison. He should have been freed years ago. Yet Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s spiteful government seems bent on making sure he stays behind bars.”
It also noted: “Public Safety Minister Steven Blaney said that Khadr was guilty of “heinous crimes,” though he was a minor under his father’s abusive control. This is consistent with the Conservative government’s shameless decision to abandon him to a U.S. military process that President Barack Obama himself described as a “legal black hole.””
The scathing editorial concluded: “This case has shamed Canada from start to finish. Khadr has already passed his parole eligibility date and can now apply at any time. But as a young offender in provincial custody he could not only apply for release to the Parole Board of Canada but also to a youth court judge. That’s something the federal government is clearly striving to prevent.
“By any stretch of the imagination Khadr has done time enough. The federal government is being harshly vindictive.”
YET Harper’s Conservative government is brazenly going to appeal the decision to the Supreme Court of Canada in its perverted attempt to cause more grief to Khadr.
Well, go ahead, Harper! It would be wonderful to see you receive a super-sized slap in the face from the highest court in the land.
No wonder federal Liberal Party Leader Justin Trudeau remains the Number One choice of Canadians in poll after poll in spite of all the lies and distortions hurled by Harper and his Conservatives at him.
They just want a DECENT leader heading a DECENT government.
(Photo: http://freeomarakhadr.com/)