Ottawa still weighing Khadr order, says Cannon

canada-man

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Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon said Sunday the federal government is still pondering whether to appeal a Federal Court order on the Omar Khadr case.

On CTV's Question Period, Cannon reiterated the government is "looking very seriously" whether to appeal the order that it request the United States to send Khadr home from the U.S. military prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Khadr, 22, has spent years in the detention facility on charges that he killed an American medic in Afghanistan in 2002. The charges are before a U.S. military commission, but the hearings are on hold pending a review of his case.

Cannon said Khadr, who was born in Toronto, is "accused of serious and important crimes," and he would prefer to allow the U.S. review of his case to play out.

"Our government has chosen to be able to let the Americans go through that process, and once that process is completed, they will then of course make a determination as to his guilt, his innocence or whatever will come about," Cannon said.

Detainees from other Western countries, including Britain and Australia, were sent home from Guantanamo Bay long ago, under pressure from their home governments.

Khadr is thought to be the last Westerner at Guantanamo.

On Thursday, Federal Court Judge James O'Reilly ruled that the government must ask the U.S. "as soon as practicable" to send Khadr home. He said Ottawa's refusal to demand repatriation of Khadr offends fundamental justice.

The foreign affairs minister defended his government's handing of the Khadr file.

"We're doing the exactly the same thing as the previous government had done. We're following that same course of action" he said.

But opposition MP's rejected that argument, noting that the situation has changed in Washington with a new administration that is committed to closing Guantanamo Bay.

On Question Period, Liberal MP Bryon Wilfert questioned any further delay in bringing Khadr home to face trial in Canada.

"Are we going to wait until the last soldier leaves there and when the lights go out? We now have no choice but to bring him home. This is an abdication of leadership from the government" Wilfert said.

The opposition criticism comes as the Obama administration moves closer to deciding what to do with an initial group of detainees.

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said Sunday the U.S. is "relatively close to making some calls," adding, "we're doing these all on a rolling basis."

Holder made the comments as he flew to London, the first of several stops where he will visit European leaders to discuss terrorism and other issues. The visit is also intended to strengthen ties left strained by the previous Bush administration policies on Guantanamo.

The Obama administration is edging toward transferring some prisoners to the U.S., most likely to Virginia. They are Chinese Muslims known as Uighurs, and their supporters say they never should have been at Guantanamo in the first place.

There are about 240 Guantanamo inmates, including Khadr.

As many as 60, if freed, cannot go back to their homelands because they could face abuse, imprisonment or death. They are from Azerbaijan, Algeria, Afghanistan, Chad, China, Saudi Arabia and Yemen.

Several European countries, including Portugal and Lithuania, have said they would consider taking such detainees.

http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20090426/cannon_khadr_090426/20090426?hub=Canada
 

danmand

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Nov 28, 2003
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If the opposition parties had any backbone, they would force the government
under a loss of confidence vote.
 

fuji

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The government should be activist in demanding that he get a fair trial with all the rights due to him.

Were the other Westerners who were repatriated accused of murder? I don't think in any other case Canada demands the repatriation of a Canadian accused of murder in a foreign court. We generally simply insist that they get a fair trial.
 

fuji

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The government should be activist in demanding that he get a fair trial with all the rights due to him.

Were the other Westerners who were repatriated accused of murder? I don't think in any other case Canada demands the repatriation of a Canadian accused of murder in a foreign court. We generally simply insist that they get a fair trial.
 

oldjones

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Aug 18, 2001
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Well he's six years overdue for that fair trial, and there's no timeline for one that anyone knows of.

If the US cannot—as it has amply demonstrated it cannot—give the kid a fair trial in a decent time then Canada should step up and say, "Enough".

Eventually the "law's delay" itself is an intolerable abuse that even ideological rightwingers should have the balls to protest and try to correct.

Not even to try is inexcusable. As I believe the court just ruled.
 

fuji

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Last I checked there was a new administration in the US that understands that the system in Guantanamo was unfair and has dismantled it, promising a fairer alternative. Why not give them a chance?
 

oldjones

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Aug 18, 2001
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fuji said:
Last I checked there was a new administration in the US that understands that the system in Guantanamo was unfair and has dismantled it, promising a fairer alternative. Why not give them a chance?
Because theyblew that chance long, long long ago.

How long does a possibly innocent man—certainly a child when detained, innocent or not—have to wait in harsh imprisonment while a foreign country ponderously gets its act together, simply to hold a trial, before our government lives up to its obligations?

The Court did not invent those obligations; they were always there.
 

emerging44

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fuji said:
Last I checked there was a new administration in the US that understands that the system in Guantanamo was unfair and has dismantled it, promising a fairer alternative. Why not give them a chance?
Give them a chance to do what? Omar Khadr was a child soldier whose constitutional rights have been denied and whose incarceration is illegal under international law. He should have been brought back to Canada years ago. Every day that passes just adds to the embarrassment for all fair-minded Canadians.

Even in the mock legal process to which he has been subjected so far, it is clear that the US military "evidence" is suspect at the very least and, more likely, concocted.
 
Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts