The plight of Omar Khadr: Another Afghan War torture scandal

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Even some right-wing pundits concede Stephen Harper's decision to prorogue Parliament was done in part to avoid more scrutiny of the Afghan detainee scandal. In his interview last week on CBC’s The National, the Prime Minister shrugged off the whole thing, “I think polls have been pretty clear that that's not on the top of the radar of most Canadians.”

With the House of Commons in Ottawa shuttered until March, we will need to use other means to continue a vigorous public discussion of torture in Afghanistan. To my mind the most remarkable thing about the whole detainee scandal is that the debate around it has remained almost entirely de-linked from the larger issue of Canada’s role in the occupation of Afghanistan. So, the real story is much bigger than just the abused detainees and the government evasions and cover-ups: the war itself is a scandal.  

Torture is not a blemish on an otherwise humanitarian intervention in Afghanistan. Rather, it has been--along with indefinite detention and sundry other violations of international law--part and parcel of the war from the beginning. This is not primarily the result of mistakes, or of bad apples among the occupying forces or their Afghan relays. Torture and other violations of civil liberties are, in fact, the age-old tools of imperial domination. Contrary to what Michael Ignatieff tried to make the world believe back when he was a warmongering intellectual at Harvard, there is no such thing as “Empire Lite.”

None of this, of course, is about disparaging Canadian troops--an evasion tactic that Harper has repeatedly tried to use. It’s about being honest about what the waging of a war of occupation, as part of the anachronistic NATO alliance, entails.

The case of Canadian child soldier Omar Khadr illustrates some of the interconnections of war, torture, and empire.  

Khadr, a Canadian citizen, was 15 years old when he was critically wounded in a U.S. Special Forces raid on the home in Afghanistan where he had been staying with his father, allegedly a member or sympathizer of Al-Qaeda. The young Khadr was charged with war crimes and murder for allegedly throwing a grenade that killed a U.S. Delta Force commando. He was then declared an “enemy combatant” and subjected to military tribunal proceedings in which he has been denied the standard rights of a defendant. In a pretrial hearing, Khadr’s lawyer alleged that U.S. military officials had altered reports on the firefight in order to frame Khadr.  

Eventually it came out that Khadr may also have narrowly escaped summary execution on the day he was captured, after being critically injured from being shot twice in the back. Special Forces in particular have been accused of such extra-legal killings. Just last week, news broke that Afghans had accused U.S.-led forces of summarily executing a number of people in Kunar Province, including at least eight schoolchildren.

For the past seven-and-a-half years, Khadr has been held in a legal black hole, mostly at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. President Barack Obama’s promised timeline for closing the notorious centre has not been followed (it was supposed to be closed this month), and Khadr appears no closer to freedom today than when Bush was in office. He will eventually be moved from Guantanamo, but his likely destination will be to a special prison in Illinois, where his military tribunal is expected to go ahead.   Should this trial proceed, it will be the first time in history that a child has been tried for war crimes.

Khadr is but one of countless victims of what is, as described by Irene Khan of Amnesty International, a modern day “gulag.” Although Khan was comparing only the Guantanamo detention centre to the old prison camps of the Soviet Union, the analogy can be taken further. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s famous novel was, after all, Gulag Archipelago, describing a vast system of detention centres like a chain of islands. The U.S. archipelago of torture and extra-legal detention stretches much farther than the long ago Russian one, because today’s empire extends its reach around the world.

This archipelago is a long one indeed, with military bases in dozens of countries, “black sites” in Eastern Europe and beyond, paramilitary and mercenary operatives, as well as many foreign subsidiaries and proxies.

Khadr began his ordeal at Bagram airbase, just north of Kabul, Afghanistan.   He was held there for three months, and subjected to countless indignities. It was here where, after untold abuse, he allegedly identified a photo of Maher Arar as someone he recognized from years before in a Kabul safe house (after first telling his interrogator he didn’t recognize the man in the picture). Arar, an innocent man, was later kidnapped by U.S. authorities and shipped to Syria where he was tortured. In other words, “information” obtained through the illegal detention and torture of one Canadian citizen seems to have led to the illegal rendition and torture of another Canadian citizen.

From Bagram, Khadr was transported to “Gitmo”. Successive Canadian governments left Khadr to rot; the sting of torture and abuse was magnified by the pain of abandonment by his own country’s government. And now he may be moved along to another island in the archipelago.

The Liberals, whose current leader was writing odes to the U.S. Empire in the early years of Khadr’s ordeal, have belatedly joined the NDP and Bloc Quebecois in calling for his return. Former Liberal Foreign Affairs Minister Bill Graham has said that he regrets his government’s inaction.

The Conservatives would seem to have no regrets, having ignored repeated Canadian court orders to ask for the repatriation of their citizen. Maybe, like with the detainee scandal, Harper just thinks Canadians don’t care about what has happened to Omar Khadr.

It’s up to us to prove him wrong.

Derrick O’Keefe is the co-chair of the Canadian Peace Alliance and a member of the Vancouver StopWar.ca Coalition. He will be one of the speakers at a candlelight vigil and free public forum organized by Amnesty International to call for justice for Omar Khadr, Monday, Jan. 11. The vigil starts at 5:45 pm in Victory Park (West Pender at Hamilton), followed by a forum at 6:30 pm at SFU Harbour Centre, 515 West Pender Street (Segal Room).

Comments (7) Add New Comment
Strategis
I am deeply offended and ashamed at how our "allies" the American government as well as the Canadian government have abused Omar Khadr in order to fuel their fake "war on terror". There are a number of very serious war crimes that the US military, US government, and Canadian government have commited or been complicit in regarding the treatment of Omar Khadr. Attempted murder of a minor. Framing a minor for murder. Torturing a minor. Kidnapping and forced confinement of a minor. Denying a child soldier the protections and assistance guaranteed by international law. Demonizing a person for allegedly attempting to help defend a country from a protracted, brutal, illegal, military occupation. Denying an alleged prisoner of war the rights guaranteed by international law. Egregious violations of universal human rights. Denial of habeas corpus. Denial of the right to enter Canada. Denial of justice. Psychological and physical torture for years. Abandonment by the Canadian government of one of its citizens. All of these, and other crimes speak of the moral degeneracy of both the American and Canadian governments, handmaidens in this horrendous travesty of truth, justice, and human decency.

A great deal can be learnt about the true, dark nature of the neoconservative and neoliberal ideologues and their lack of moral principles from a close examination of this story. Much the same lessons can be learnt by studying the role of the Canadian and U.S. imperialistic governments in Haiti, as well as the role of the Canadian government in its support of crimes against humanity commited by Canadian mining companies around the world.
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beelzebub
Him and his welfare sucking, terrorist supporting, terrorist trained family should all be booted from this country.
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nanibold

His terrorist-supporting family should probably be booted out, but the Omar kid should be repatriated and worked through the court systems like any other Canadian citizen. Leaving a child soldier who has Canadian citizenship to rot in Guantanamo at the mercy of a demented US military court system is immoral. The fact that people are accusing him of "murder" is just so unbelievably wrong... I don't know what the hell they're thinking. He was 15. Soldiers flew across the globe and shot everybody inside the house he was in. They also shot him. And he, what, threw a grenade in response? How the hell is that "murder"? It's a fucking military conflict! You kick in a door and shoot everybody inside, sometimes they fight back. All this, on top of the fact that we're hearing evidence now (from the american soldiers themselves) that it might even have been someone else who threw the grenade... so we don't even know if he's 'guilty' or not...
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teth adam
he is a jihadist. to him and others like him we are all just infidels.

islamists like him think long term and use our own legal traditions and nuanced thinking against us. to them it is merely another tool in an arsenal to achieve their long term goals.

the first defence against a trap is being aware of its existence.
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R U Kiddingme
If the Khadrs are acting contrary to the security of Canada, and it appears that they are, then their citizenship should be revoked.

In the meantime, Omar Khadr is a Canadian citizen and entitled to the protection of his country. What that might be, I don't know -- Canada cannot pull mandamus or habeas corpus on people that are not in its custody, but I presume that the State can make a request to transfer him to Canada for a domestic war crimes trial, if the evidence warrants it.

It's the principal of the thing.
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Sheeple
I hate all evil doers and terrorists.

The US is our closest ally (not the Royal Windsors over on that little Island the UK) and largest trading partner with whom we share a very large border.

Kadr Family NOT on Trial...

The family may be brain washed with extreme views but the ones left here in Canada have so far not been found by law (and the law has tried) to be a threat here.

We do not revoke Citizenship (unless they are landed immigrants not born here that are convicted of serious Crime(s) ) especially not for the kids born here it is part of our Basic Human Rights that is what makes Canada a Great Country for ALL of US!

15 Year Old Child Soldier + Battlefield Photos...

I find it a little hard to believe that a 15 year old boy after being bombarded for several hours by airstrikes called in by US special forces and the little hut he was in with local insurgents LEVELED by the Airforce & surrounded by ELITE SPECIAL FORCES...

+ Shot twice in both sides of his chest - a 15 year old boy - Kadr

+ than he was found by Special Forces buried FACE DOWN COMATOSE DYING...

+ that he somehow jumped up like Spider Man

+ than took out some Special Forces Soldiers just like that - a 15 year old boy!

So either the Elite Special Forces battle hardened troops could not handle a shot to near death comatose face down buried under ruble 15 year old boy...

or

... the official "Story" is utter Bull Shit!

Battlefield Photos by the US Military!...

http://mcplpaulfranklin.blogspot.ca/2011/03/real-omar-khadar-in-pictures...

Every other inmate a G' Bay were repatriated including the UK & Australia claimed their "Jihad's"...

Only Canada under US style Right Wing Republican down south style extreme rigid ideology Neo-Con Bots failed to follow normal legal protocol.

Despite the Courts in Canada basically saying yes Mr. Kadr gets to come home to Canada.

Every Canadian should be worried that this Neo-Con Bot rigid Ideological nuts let Canadians ROT in Jail in foreign Countries including not helping much whether it's G' Bay, Mexico, Saudi Arabia, Communist China or elsewhere!

Kadr today you or I tomorrow as we travel on vacation or business!

Laws and due process work only when it's for equal for everybody not chosen by some idiot Politician whether from the left or far right.

The guilty plea entered was to shorten his "stay" at G'Bay and it was not a Court of Law! Simply a Military Commission.

In the Country of the USA Military Commissions are not held for "enemy soldiers" or even to convict regular US Citizens, because it is NOT a Court of Law recognized in ANY Country under ANY Legal System!

It only goes in G'Bay because anything goes there including Torture.

This Canadian boy now a man deserves to come home to Canada like ALL Canadians and be subject to the Canadian Legal System.
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Roedy Green
American soldiers illegally invaded Omar Khadr’s native country and tried to kill him. By all the ordinary rules of war, and self-defence, Khadr had every right to try to kill his attackers. Further he was a child soldier age 15. Americans convicted him of terrorism (which is absurd since he did not even allegedly hurt any civilians or try to change their political views by force), and tortured him for 10 years in Guantánamo as Canada did nothing to rescue him even though he was a Canadian citizen. He is a simple POW (Prisoner Of War). Now Canada is preparing to hold him prisoner for a further 8 year sentence. This is an outrage. I hope he eventually sues his tormentors for billions of dollars. May those those responsible be imprisoned and tortured themselves. What the hell did Americans expect of Khadr — sit there and be killed? Every American should wretch into the toilet in shame at how badly their country has behaved.
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