Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

Ex-Gitmo Detainee Omar Khadr Recovering From 19-Hour Shoulder Surgery

The Canadian Press, 13 Mar, 2017 01:52 PM
  • Ex-Gitmo Detainee Omar Khadr Recovering From 19-Hour Shoulder Surgery
TORONTO — Former Guantanamo Bay inmate Omar Khadr is recovering from a 19-hour operation on a shoulder that was badly injured in Afghanistan 15 years ago, his lawyer said Monday.
 
The Toronto-born Khadr remained in intensive care at the University of Alberta hospital and it was not clear when he might be able to go home, Dennis Edney said in an interview from Edmonton.
 
Three surgeons were involved in Friday's complicated surgery — first reported by the Globe and Mail — that Edney said should have been done years ago.
 
"What they did was take bone from different parts of his legs and muscles from other parts of his body to try to rebuild his right shoulder," Edney said. "There's no prognosis — it's almost experimental in some ways, and hoping that it works."
 
Khadr had gone into hospital expecting minor surgery that would have seen him back at school on Tuesday, Edney chuckled.
 
Now 30, Khadr was horrifically injured as a 15-year-old in a four-hour bombardment and firefight with American soldiers, who captured him in Afghanistan in July 2002. In addition to the shoulder injuries, he was blinded in one eye and still has shrapnel in the other that threatens his sight.
 
"There are times when you can see that the shrapnel has moved in the eye, which is always scary for me because he could go completely blind," said Edney, who has given lectures about his client all over the world. The lawyer said it might take a military surgeon with experience in shrapnel wounds to salvage Khadr's sight.
 
 
After his capture, the teenager was sent to Guantanamo Bay later in 2002, where authorities accused him of throwing a grenade that killed an American special forces soldier during the Afghanistan firefight. He pleaded guilty in October 2010 before a widely discredited military commission to five war crimes, and was sentenced to a further eight years in prison.
 
Khadr, who afterwards said he only pleaded guilty to get out of Guantanamo Bay, transferred to Canada in 2012 to serve out his sentence and was subsequently granted bail in May 2015 pending an appeal of his U.S. conviction.
 
Despite the pressing need and multiple infections over the years, Khadr received little treatment at Guantanamo Bay or in Canada. Three years ago, however, while he was still in detention, surgeons at the Edmonton hospital scraped bone and flesh in an effort to remove festering tissue.
 
Since his release on bail, Khadr has completed his high school diploma and was taking courses — as an honours student — in the hopes of being accepted into nursing school in the fall.
 
"It would be great for him to get into medicine in some form," Edney said.
 
Initially stiff bail restrictions have been eased over the last three years — although he is still barred from any contact with one of his sisters. For the most part, however, he lives a largely solitary lifestyle out of the glare of the public spotlight that once tracked his every move. He moved out of the Edney home where he had been living since his release and has been on his own in a small apartment for the past several months.
 
In addition to the stalled appeal in the U.S., Khadr is suing the federal government for violating his rights.

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver's Downtown Eastside Eatery Kissa Tanto Named The Country's Best New Restaurant

Vancouver's Downtown Eastside Eatery Kissa Tanto Named The Country's Best New Restaurant
Toronto's Alo has topped the 2017 Canada's 100 Best Restaurants list while Vancouver eatery Kissa Tanto has been named the country's best new restaurant.

Vancouver's Downtown Eastside Eatery Kissa Tanto Named The Country's Best New Restaurant

Scotiabank CEO Concerned About Housing Market Corrections In Toronto, Vancouver

Scotiabank CEO Concerned About Housing Market Corrections In Toronto, Vancouver
 The CEO of Scotiabank (TSX:BNS) says he's concerned about the possibility of a housing market correction in Toronto and Vancouver.

Scotiabank CEO Concerned About Housing Market Corrections In Toronto, Vancouver

RCMP Ordered To Pay Egregiously Harassed Force Member $141K

RCMP Ordered To Pay Egregiously Harassed Force Member $141K
Senior RCMP officers harassed a sergeant mercilessly and damaged his career after deciding he had lied to them about his unsuccessful bid to run for the federal Conservatives in 2005, an Ontario judge has ruled.

RCMP Ordered To Pay Egregiously Harassed Force Member $141K

B.C. Company Awarded $230-Million Shipbuilding Contract

B.C. Company Awarded $230-Million Shipbuilding Contract
VANCOUVER — A Vancouver-area shipyard has been handed a $230-million contract to help create the latest vessel in the federal government's national shipbuilding plan.

B.C. Company Awarded $230-Million Shipbuilding Contract

Edmonton Man Appealing Sentence For Crash That Killed Toddler Granted Bail

Edmonton Man Appealing Sentence For Crash That Killed Toddler Granted Bail
Richard Suter, 62, was initially sentenced to four months in jail along with a 30-month driving suspension after he pleaded guilty to failing to provide a breath sample in a death.

Edmonton Man Appealing Sentence For Crash That Killed Toddler Granted Bail

Two-Vehicle Collision On Highway In East-Central Alberta Leaves Five Dead

Two-Vehicle Collision On Highway In East-Central Alberta Leaves Five Dead
RCMP say the crash near Amisk occurred Monday night when the driver and only occupant of a sport-utility vehicle crossed the centre line and hit a car with a family of four inside.

Two-Vehicle Collision On Highway In East-Central Alberta Leaves Five Dead