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Home Front: WoT
Khadr kid's lawyer wants Canuck support
2005-11-11
A lawyer for a Canadian-born teenage terror suspect captured in Afghanistan, held at Guantanamo Bay and accused of killing a US soldier, demanded action from Canada on the case on Tuesday. Omar Ahmed Khadr, 19, was charged Monday with murder, attempted murder, conspiracy and aiding the enemy and could face the death penalty if convicted by one of the Pentagon’s special military commissions. “It seems to me, the Canadian government hasn’t done everything it needs to in terms of the basic protection of one of its citizens,” US-based lawyer Muneer Ahmed told AFP.
Seems to me the kid ran off to fight jihad with Pop and now he doesn't want to take the consequences.
“What is their position as to the fairness or unfairness of the military commission process?” he said, referring to arrangements by US authorities to try “enemy combatants” they deem not covered by the Geneva Conventions.
Their position is that they are anti-US, but they're not so stupid as to openly defend someone caught committing jihad. Not quite, anyway ....
“They are in as good a position as anyone else to make a determination based on their understanding of fairness and due process as to whether the military commission process meets those basic standards.” Ahmed challenged the Canadian government to say whether it believed the US tribunal system, which have been pilloried by human rights groups, was “fair.”
He'd much rather be tried under shariah, of course, since murdering an infidel isn't a crime...
In Ottawa, Dan McTeague, parliamentary secretary responsible for Canadians abroad, responded by defending the conduct of Prime Minister Paul Martin’s government. “The government of Canada has done a lot in this case, including asking for assurances from the United States that Mr. Khadr, who was a juvenile at the time of his offenses, won’t be subject to the death penalty, and has the benefits of due process,” he said. US officials had not responded but Canada, which first raised the issue in 2003, would continue to press the United States, McTeague said.
Not a problem. The kid turns 21 when???? We can make room at Gitmo that long.

We're ignoring you. You've amply demonstrated which side you're on, so butt out of our business.
Khadr was charged as a long simmering row over the use of military courts reached boiling point, sparking recriminations from President George W. Bush’s opponents in Congress. US Supreme Court said Monday that it would rule on the legality of the special military courts in early 2006, a move which could delay Khadr’s trial.
Posted by:Fred

#5  Khadr needs to become an issue in the coming Canadian election. All the Conservatives have to do is mention his name. Watching the criminal conspiracy pretending to be a political party Liberals and co-conspirator pretending to be a world statesman Martin try to defend the bastard kid knowing that everytime they opened their mouths was costing them votes would be, well.....

Election $100mil
Popcorn $1.00
Defending the indefensible: Priceless
Posted by: john   2005-11-11 21:14  

#4  Cleaque Omavith7737 is right about Canadian snipers. It's sad, tho, to see what was once a brave and effective military emasculated - and I use the phrase intentionally.
Posted by: too true   2005-11-11 11:31  

#3  Sorry, folks. No hot needle for Omar...

No Death Penalty for Suspected al-Qaida
WASHINGTON - Five terror suspects charged with crimes earlier this week will not face the death penalty if found guilty. The five men, including one accused of killing a Special Forces medic, are being held at the Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, detention center. There are now a total of nine detainees there who have been charged with criminal offenses. The decision was made not to seek capital punishment in the five latest cases —the same decision made in the four earlier cases, Pentagon spokesman Maj. Michael Shavers said Thursday. Pentagon spokesman Lawrence Di Rita said the decision not to seek the death penalty is not necessarily a reflection of the opposition to capital punishment in other coalition countries. He said the cases are reviewed and decided on their own merits."We're aware that some coalition partners have raised some of these concerns," he told reporters Thursday. "We try to be attentive to those concerns, but I wouldn't make the direct connection."
I would.
An Australian and a Canadian man are among those charged, and those countries — along with other allies — have expressed concerns about the death penalty.
Toronto-born Omar Khadr was charged with murder, attempted murder, aiding the enemy and conspiracy, for allegedly tossing a grenade that killed a U.S. Special Forces medic while fighting with the Taliban in Afghanistan and for planting mines to target U.S. convoys.
The other four suspects were charged with conspiracy. They are Ghassan Abdullah al Sharbi and Jabran Said bin al Qahtani of Saudi Arabia; Sufyian Barhoumi of Algeria; and Binyam Ahmed Muhammad of Ethiopia. The charges involve an alleged conspiracy involving the use of roadside bombs and, in one case, information on how to make a so-called "dirty bomb" that would release radioactivity, according to the complaint.


So it looks like we'll be paying for Koran's and feeding tubes for these maggots for the rest of their lives.
Posted by: tu3031   2005-11-11 09:57  

#2  I wouldn't say that with one in sniper range.
Posted by: Cleaque Omavith7737   2005-11-11 09:45  

#1  Just hang the brat. To make it fair, canada can hang all the american jihadis that kill canadian soldiers to get back at us.
Only thing is, it's awfull hard to find a canadian soldier to kill, unless you look in the local bar.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2005-11-11 09:42  

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