Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Omar Khadr: Youth Or Adult? Question Goes To Canada's Top Court Thursday

Darpan News Desk, 13 May, 2015 11:05 PM
    TORONTO — The case of former Guantanamo Bay prisoner Omar Khadr returns to Canada's top court for a third time on Thursday, as the federal government fights to have him declared an adult offender for crimes he committed as a 15-year-old.
     
    The dispute centres on whether the eight-year sentence a U.S. military commission handed him for war crimes should be interpreted as a youth or adult sentence.
     
    However, the arcane technical legal battle has taken on loud political overtones.
     
    "This case is another illustration of the heavy-handed approach Canada has consistently taken towards him," said Gillian Hnatiw, who represents the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, which is intervening in the case.
     
    Khadr, 28, was released on bail last week after almost 13 years in custody while he appeals his U.S. conviction, which has drawn fierce criticism from legal and human rights experts.
     
    Although he was 15 when his crimes occurred in Afghanistan in July 2002, the military commission made no distinction between juveniles and adults in sentencing him in 2010 to a further eight years behind bars.
     
    The federal government, which has consistently branded him a hardened terrorist and is separately fighting his bail, argues Khadr was really given five concurrent eight-year terms for each of the five war crimes to which he pleaded guilty.
     
    While the government concedes the sentence for the most serious charge — the murder of an American special forces soldier — can only be considered a youth sentence, it argues the other four — including attempted murder — must be viewed as adult sentences.
     
    No provisions exist for an inmate to serve both youth and adult sentences at the same time, so Ottawa classified him as an adult offender when he transferred to Canada from Guantanamo Bay in September 2012 under an international treaty to serve out his punishment.
     
    Khadr's lawyers — with the unanimous backing last July of the Alberta Court of Appeal — argue he is serving a single global sentence of eight years, which can only be interpreted as a youth sentence.
     
    They argue the Harper government is simply being vindictive as it pursues a political tough-on-terror-and-crime agenda.
     
    Because Khadr is no longer in custody, the outcome of the Supreme Court case may end up having little direct impact on him, and his situation appears to be unique and unlikely to be repeated.
     
    "It's difficult to see how this could affect anyone else," Nate Whitling, one of Khadr's lawyers who will argue the case, said on Wednesday.
     
    "But it's got the (Khadr) name attached to it."
     
     
    However, some observers said there could be broader implications given that Canada is likely to face future requests to repatriate youths sentenced by foreign states for crimes committed abroad.
     
    "This could occur in any context — such as a youth fighting for ISIS or a teenager convicted of a drug-related crime unconnected to terrorism," Hnatiw said.
     
    "The decision will give some direction on how these youths are to be treated by Canada when they are brought home to serve the balance of a foreign sentence."
     
    The Supreme Court has twice before taken up Khadr's case, both times siding with him.
     
    In 2008, the court ruled Canadian officials had acted illegally by sharing intelligence information about him with his U.S. captors.
     
    In 2010, the top court declared that Ottawa had violated his constitutional rights when Canadian agents interrogated him in Guantanamo Bay despite knowing he had been abused beforehand.
     
    In the interim, Khadr is adapting to life outside the confines of a prison, said Dennis Edney, the Edmonton lawyer who has taken him in while on bail.
     
    "Bought him a bike and watched him ride away," Edney said. "Pretty symbolic."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    60-Year-Old Woman Struck In Vancouver Grocery-Store Parking Lot Dies In Hospital: Police

    60-Year-Old Woman Struck In Vancouver Grocery-Store Parking Lot Dies In Hospital: Police
    VANCOUVER — A 60-year-old Vancouver woman who was hit by a pickup truck in a grocery-store parking lot has died of her injuries. Police say the pedestrian was walking along a foot path on Monday afternoon when she was struck.

    60-Year-Old Woman Struck In Vancouver Grocery-Store Parking Lot Dies In Hospital: Police

    Second Mountie In B.C. Acquitted Of Perjury Stemming From Dziekanski Inquiry

    Second Mountie In B.C. Acquitted Of Perjury Stemming From Dziekanski Inquiry
    VANCOUVER — A second Mountie has been acquitted of perjury stemming from a public inquiry into Robert Dziekanski's death at Vancouver's airport.

    Second Mountie In B.C. Acquitted Of Perjury Stemming From Dziekanski Inquiry

    14-Year-Old Actress Abigail Bergman And Friend Missing In Toronto Area, Police Ask For Public's Help

    14-Year-Old Actress Abigail Bergman And Friend Missing In Toronto Area, Police Ask For Public's Help
    Fourteen-year-old Abigail Bergman — who acts on the Family Channel's "Next Step" series — and her friend Polinah Ouskova, 15, were reported missing by their families after they didn't return to their Oakville, Ont. homes on Monday night

    14-Year-Old Actress Abigail Bergman And Friend Missing In Toronto Area, Police Ask For Public's Help

    Alaska Delegation To Visit Mount Polley Disaster Site, Meet Company, First Nations

    VICTORIA — A delegation of Alaskans is coming to B.C. to voice concerns about the Mount Polley mine disaster and the possibility of a similar environmental catastrophe occurring near their border.

    Alaska Delegation To Visit Mount Polley Disaster Site, Meet Company, First Nations

    B.C. Man Wrongly Imprisoned For 27 Years Can Sue, Supreme Court Says

    B.C. Man Wrongly Imprisoned For 27 Years Can Sue, Supreme Court Says
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled a B.C. man can use the Charter of Rights and Freedoms to pursue a lawsuit after being wrongly imprisoned for 27 years for sexual assaults he did not commit.

    B.C. Man Wrongly Imprisoned For 27 Years Can Sue, Supreme Court Says

    B.C. Food Bank Unsure How Toxic Mothballs Ended Up In Candy Mixture

    B.C. Food Bank Unsure How Toxic Mothballs Ended Up In Candy Mixture
    PORT MOODY, B.C. — The CEO of a British Columbia non-profit that accidentally distributed toxic mothballs in more than 1,100 food bank hampers says he has no idea how the mishap happened.

    B.C. Food Bank Unsure How Toxic Mothballs Ended Up In Candy Mixture