Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Omar Khadr Back In Edmonton Court To Ask For Changes To Bail Conditions

The Canadian Press, 13 Dec, 2018 10:08 PM

    EDMONTON — Lawyers for former Guantanamo Bay detainee Omar Khadr are scheduled to appear in Edmonton court today to seek changes to bail conditions he faces while he appeals war crime convictions by a U.S. military commission.


    Khadr, who is now 32, is seeking a Canadian passport to travel to Saudi Arabia and wants permission to speak to his sister.


    An application filed by his lawyer, Nathan Whitling, suggests Khadr's appeal in the United States has been overly delayed and he has obeyed all the conditions of his release.


    It says those conditions have caused psychological stress and anxiety.


    Khadr spent years in U.S. detention at Guantanamo Bay after he was caught at age 15 and accused of tossing a grenade that killed special forces soldier Christopher Speer at a militant compound in Afghanistan in 2002.


    He says in an affidavit attached to the application that the "indefinite and potentially endless detention" continues.


    Khadr adds that he would like to perform the Hajj, a pilgrimage to Mecca in Saudi Arabia which is a mandatory religious duty for Muslims once in their lifetime.


    He would also like to be able to speak on the phone or over Skype to his sister Zaynab Khadr. She has spoken in favour of al-Qaida and was investigated in Canada more than a decade ago for helping the terrorist network, but was never charged.


    The rules of Khadr's bail allow him to meet with her but only in the presence of his bail supervisor or one of his lawyers.


    Khadr also needs permission to travel outside Alberta, and has made several trips to Toronto to visit his family and to deal with a civil lawsuit there seeking to enforce a multimillion-dollar judgment granted against him in Utah in favour of Speer's widow.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Bad B.C. Drivers To Face Increased Penalties; Fines To Jump 20 Per Cent Annually

    Bad B.C. Drivers To Face Increased Penalties; Fines To Jump 20 Per Cent Annually
    VICTORIA — Bad drivers in British Columbia have less than 24 hours to improve their habits or face increased penalties for speeding, impaired or distracted driving and other offences.

    Bad B.C. Drivers To Face Increased Penalties; Fines To Jump 20 Per Cent Annually

    Rotating Canada Post Strikes Move Throughout Quebec: Union

    Rotating Canada Post Strikes Move Throughout Quebec: Union
    OTTAWA — Canada Post employees from several Quebec communities are joining countrywide rotating strikes a day after about 6,000 workers walked off the job in Montreal.

    Rotating Canada Post Strikes Move Throughout Quebec: Union

    Ottawa Argues One Province's Failure To Bring In A Carbon Tax Will Harm Others

    Ottawa Argues One Province's Failure To Bring In A Carbon Tax Will Harm Others
    Last week, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau detailed a plan to charge a carbon tax in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and New Brunswick — the four provinces refusing to comply.

    Ottawa Argues One Province's Failure To Bring In A Carbon Tax Will Harm Others

    Halifax Woman Plans To Die On Thursday, Saying Ottawa Is Forcing Early Death On Her

    There's No Reason I Should Have To Die On Nov. 1 ... I Want To Live As Many Days As I Can.

    Halifax Woman Plans To Die On Thursday, Saying Ottawa Is Forcing Early Death On Her

    Kelly Ellard, Killer Of B.C. Teen Reena Virk, Has Day Parole Extended For Another Six Months

    Thirty-five-year-old Kelly Ellard was convicted of second-degree murder in 2005 and the Parole Board of Canada granted her conditional day parole last November.

    Kelly Ellard, Killer Of B.C. Teen Reena Virk, Has Day Parole Extended For Another Six Months

    WWF Says Global Wildlife Populations Declined 60 Per Cent, Demands Action

    WWF Says Global Wildlife Populations Declined 60 Per Cent, Demands Action
    TORONTO — Canadian wildlife are not exempt from a "global biodiversity crisis" that is devastating worldwide animal populations, according to a stark new report by the World Wildlife Fund.

    WWF Says Global Wildlife Populations Declined 60 Per Cent, Demands Action