Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Omar Khadr Bail Decision Delayed Until Thursday

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 May, 2015 11:29 AM
    EDMONTON — An Alberta judge says she needs more time to make a decision on whether former Guantanamo Bay prisoner Omar Khadr should be released on bail.
     
    Court of Appeal Justice Myra Bielby is expected to announce her decision Thursday morning.
     
    The news followed a last-ditch attempt by the federal government to keep Khadr behind bars.
     
    Ottawa argued Khadr's release would damage Canada's international relations.
     
    A lower court judge had granted the Toronto-born Khadr bail while he appeals his war crimes conviction in the United States.
     
    Twenty-eight-year-old Khadr pleaded guilty in 2010 to five war crimes — including murder for the death of an American special forces soldier — before a widely discredited U.S. military commission.
     
    The alleged offences occurred in Afghanistan in July 2002 when he was 15.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Government Privatizes Wheat Board With Sale To G3 Global Grain Group

    Government Privatizes Wheat Board With Sale To G3 Global Grain Group
    G3 Global Grain Group will get 50.1 per cent of the company in exchange for an investment of $250 million. The other 49.9 per cent will be kept in trust for farmers who deliver grain to the board.

    Government Privatizes Wheat Board With Sale To G3 Global Grain Group

    Duffy trial could go long, run into campaign orbit

    Duffy trial could go long, run into campaign orbit
    OTTAWA — The Mike Duffy trial looks like it is going to go longer than the 41 days allotted, potentially dragging it into the orbit of the autumn federal election campaign.

    Duffy trial could go long, run into campaign orbit

    Cyberattacks On Federal Research Agency Tried To Beat The Clock: Documents

    Cyberattacks On Federal Research Agency Tried To Beat The Clock: Documents
    OTTAWA — Time stands still for no one, but that didn't stop cyberattackers from trying to shut down a National Research Council service that synchronizes computer clocks.

    Cyberattacks On Federal Research Agency Tried To Beat The Clock: Documents

    CBC Radio Rebrands Radio Program 'Q' As 'q'

    CBC Radio Rebrands Radio Program 'Q' As 'q'
    TORONTO — CBC Radio says its revamped arts and culture show "Q" has been renamed, sort of. The new name is the same, but spelled with a lower-case "q."

    CBC Radio Rebrands Radio Program 'Q' As 'q'

    Pop Star Shawn Mendes Criticized For Urging Young Fans To Buy Every CD In Stores

    Pop Star Shawn Mendes Criticized For Urging Young Fans To Buy Every CD In Stores
    TORONTO — A Shawn Mendes marketing campaign encouraging young fans to buy every single copy of the teen-pop heart-throb's new album from local stores is eliciting outrage from child advocacy groups.

    Pop Star Shawn Mendes Criticized For Urging Young Fans To Buy Every CD In Stores

    Hiring At Veterans Affairs Doesn't Mean Cuts Went Too Far, O'toole Says

    OTTAWA — Veterans Affairs has been on a hiring spree this week, but the minister in charge says it's not a signal that the Conservative government believes cuts to the bureaucracy went too far.

    Hiring At Veterans Affairs Doesn't Mean Cuts Went Too Far, O'toole Says