Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Green Party Leader May Very Apologetic About Omar Khadr Remarks

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 May, 2015 12:27 PM
    OTTAWA — Green party Leader Elizabeth May says she is "very apologetic" about remarks she made on the weekend that included profanity and insulted the federal cabinet about how it has treated Omar Khadr.
     
    May was among party leaders who addressed Parliament Hill journalists and politicians on Saturday night at their annual press gallery dinner.
     
    Usually, party leaders deliver light-hearted, mainly self-deprecating speeches that include the odd barb thrown at the media.
     
    But May went on at length about being the only female leader and having to claw her way into televised leaders' debates.
     
    Transport Minister Lisa Raitt intervened and attempted to persuade May to end her speech, but instead, May played a recording of "Welcome back Kotter" — a theme song from a 1970s sitcom — and stated that Khadr has "more class than the whole f---ing cabinet."
     
    In a phone interview on Sunday, a hoarse May expressed her regrets for her taste in jokes, her lack of respect for her parliamentary colleagues and her choice of language.
     
    "I wouldn't want anyone to think I was less than respectful for the people with whom I work," May said.
     
    "I apologize that I made an attempt to be funny and edgy....and it didn't work."
     
    May said she was just getting over the flu, had put in a 21-hour work day on Friday, and then had to rise early in British Columbia on Saturday morning to make it to the press gallery event in Gatineau, Que.
     
    "My funny speech wasn't funny. That's not the first time a politician has done that."
     
    In the Khadr section of her speech, May said she meant to make the point that Canada is a country that gives people second chances, and that she hopes Canadians welcome him into their midst.
     
    Khadr, a former Guantanamo Bay prisoner, was set free on bail last Thursday despite repeated attempts by the federal government to keep him behind bars in Canada.
     
    Now 28, Khadr pleaded guilty in October 2010 before a widely discredited military commission to five war crimes — including murder in the death of Speer, a U.S. special forces soldier.
     
    Khadr spent almost 13 years behind bars — four of them as a convicted war criminal.
     
    He was captured, badly wounded, by American forces in Afghanistan in July 2002, when he was 15 years old. At one time, he was the youngest prisoner at the American prison compound in Guantanamo Bay.
     
    May's remarks left many at the Saturday night gala wondering what had come over her, and sparked a Twitter storm on Sunday.
     
    May said she had no hard feelings towards Raitt for intervening in her speech, and said the two women are friends.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Prime Minister Says He Won't Be Asked To Testify At Mike Duffy Trial

    Prime Minister Says He Won't Be Asked To Testify At Mike Duffy Trial
    VANCOUVER — Prime Minister Stephen Harper says he won't be called to testify at the Mike Duffy trial.

    Prime Minister Says He Won't Be Asked To Testify At Mike Duffy Trial

    Toronto Man Charged After 27-Year-Old Woman Kidnapped, Sexually Assaulted For 5 Days

    Toronto Man Charged After 27-Year-Old Woman Kidnapped, Sexually Assaulted For 5 Days
    TORONTO — A Toronto man accused of holding a woman captive for five days and subjecting her to sexual assaults that included "ritualistic actions" has been charged with multiple offences.

    Toronto Man Charged After 27-Year-Old Woman Kidnapped, Sexually Assaulted For 5 Days

    Search Suspended For Man Who Went Missing In BC's Murky Nautley River

    Search Suspended For Man Who Went Missing In BC's Murky Nautley River
    The man is believed to have fallen into the Nautley River near the community of Fort Fraser, west of Vanderhoof, at about 12:30 p.m. on Easter Sunday.

    Search Suspended For Man Who Went Missing In BC's Murky Nautley River

    Canadian Government Sells Its $3.3 Billion Stake In General Motors

    Canadian Government Sells Its $3.3 Billion Stake In General Motors
    OTTAWA — The Harper government unloaded its multibillion-dollar stake in General Motors on Monday, tapping into a stockpile of cash that could help it overcome the oil slump and fulfil its key promise to balance the election-year budget.

    Canadian Government Sells Its $3.3 Billion Stake In General Motors

    PM Harper Announces $243.5 Million Contribution For World's Most Powerful Thirty Meter Telescope

    PM Harper Announces $243.5 Million Contribution For World's Most Powerful Thirty Meter Telescope
    VANCOUVER — Canadian companies will play a significant role in constructing what's billed as the most powerful optical telescope on Earth.

    PM Harper Announces $243.5 Million Contribution For World's Most Powerful Thirty Meter Telescope

    Privacy Commissioner Calls On Bell To Seek Customer Consent For Ad Program

    Privacy Commissioner Calls On Bell To Seek Customer Consent For Ad Program
    Canada's privacy commissioner says Bell should seek customer consent to track their Internet, TV and phone call use to deliver targeted online advertising.

    Privacy Commissioner Calls On Bell To Seek Customer Consent For Ad Program