Sunday, May 23, 2010

The Globe and Mail editorialized this month that Omar Khadr should be brought home from Guantanamo for a fair trial.

Further, Gloria Galloway had this to say in February:

Tories stand pat on Omar Khadr

Gloria Galloway

The Conservative government will not ask for Omar Khadr to be repatriated from an American detention centre in Cuba despite a Supreme Court ruling that his rights have been violated, the Foreign Affairs Minister said Wednesday.

“It’s exactly the same decision that we have taken since the outset of this incident,” Lawrence Cannon told reporters.

“We, of course, respect the decision that the Obama administration has taken to close down Guantanamo but at the same time to make sure that those people who are held, and who have charges that are being put forward and they are facing, that indeed the American justice system go forward,” he said.

Mr. Cannon said the Canadian government will continue to monitor the situation and allow the Americans to make a determination. Once that determination is done, he said, “then we will see what the next steps are.”

In a 9-0 ruling last week, the Court found that Canada and the United States are violating Mr. Khadr's right to life, liberty and security under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, but stopped short of ordering the government to ask Washington to send him home.

NDP MP Paul Dewar said the government’s response is unacceptable.

“What the court was clearly directing the government to do was to reply and provide remedy and what the Supreme Court said is that every day that Mr. Khadr is in the facility in Guantanamo Bay, his constitutional rights are being violated.”

It’s obvious, Mr. Dewar said, that the government should immediately communicate with the U.S. administration and ask that Mr. Khadr be returned to Canada.

It’s obvious, Mr. Dewar said, that the government should immediately communicate with the U.S. administration and ask that Mr. Khadr be returned to Canada.

Bob Rae, the Liberal foreign affairs critic, also said it is up to Justice Minister Rob Nicholson, the Attorney-General of Canada, to explain how the government will react to the court's ruling.

“The Attorney General of Canada has to tell us how the government intends to comply with a decision of the Supreme Court of Canada,” said Mr. Rae.

Mr. Cannon said that Mr. Nicholson is still reviewing the Supreme Court decision and will offer a response once the review is complete.

Mr. Khadr was 15 years old in 2002 when was severely wounded in a skirmish in which he is alleged to have thrown a grenade that killed a U.S. Special Forces medic. He was charged with murder and scheduled to go before a Guantanamo Bay military commission. He is still awaiting that trial.

Meanwhile, more than half of the respondents (54 per cent) to an Angus-Reid online poll online poll released Wednesday said they have no sympathy for the man who has been held by the Americans in a Guantanamo Bay detention facility and subjected to torture.

That has number actually increased since last year when 45 per cent of respondents said they were untroubled by what has befallen Mr. Khadr.

Omar Khadr - Angus Reid Poll, February 2, 2010

Nearly half (48 per cent) of those surveyed by Angus-Reid agreed with that decision while 28 per cent disagreed.

But the poll suggests that Canadians are evenly divided about whether to return him to Canada. When asked whether they believed he should be tried by a military commission in Guantanamo Bay or repatriated to this country, 40 per cent of respondents said keep him there and 40 per cent said bring him back. The remainder said they were unsure what to do.

And while 39 per cent said they believed Mr. Khadr would get a fair trial in Cuba, 47 per cent said he would not.

Which leaves the government – and the opposition members, for that matter – in a difficult spot. With Canadians so split about Mr. Khadr’s fate, it is impossible to walk a line that will please large numbers of Canadians – or even a majority.

The Angus Reid poll, which was conducted on Feb.1 and Feb. 2, of 1,001 randomly selected Canadians who participate in Angus Reid’s online forum, is expected to accurately reflect the views of the Canadian population within 3.1. percentage points 19 times out of 20.

(Photo: The Foreign Affairs Minister responds to the Supreme Court ruling on Omar Khadr today in Ottawa. Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

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