The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Let Khadr speak

- SCOTT TAYLOR GUEST OPINION Scott Taylor is publisher of Esprit de Corps magazine.

On Feb. 10, Omar Khadr gave a speech at Dalhousie University in Halifax. The talk was organized by the Romeo Dallaire Child Soldiers Initiative and not surprising­ly, Khadr spoke about having been a child soldier in Afghanista­n.

This was the first time Khadr has spoken publicly on the subject and to say that he has become a polemic character in Canada would be a massive understate­ment.

Naturally enough Khadr’s appearance at Dalhousie blew up yet another storm of controvers­y.

For those firmly in the ‘hate Khadr’ camp, the belief is that Khadr was an al-Qaida terrorist who committed treason against Canada and then was subsequent­ly rewarded by the Trudeau government with a $10.5 million settlement for having been a traitor. Based on that set of facts one would wonder how anyone could be sympatheti­c to this individual.

However, lost in the powerful emotion of hate is the fact that Khadr was just 15 at the time he was captured by U.S. special forces in Afghanista­n on July 27, 2002.

It was Khadr’s father who brought young Omar to Afghanista­n to fight against the American-led invasion. The father bears the guilt of exploiting his own son and 15-year-old Omar was simply an exploited victim. A minor. A child soldier.

To allege that Khadr was a terrorist would imply he was guilty of committing an act of terror. Yet the circumstan­ces surroundin­g Khadr’s capture were that of convention­al warfare. The U.S. military was attacking Taliban fighters in the village of Ayub Kheyl. Airstrikes

preceded the attack before U.S. special forces moved in to mop up the village.

During that phase of the operation a grenade was thrown which killed U.S. Sgt. Christophe­r Speer. Although there was never conclusive proof that Khadr threw that grenade – eyewitness accounts differ – a severely wounded Khadr was the only Taliban survivor of that clash. Khadr was labeled a ‘murderer’ and it was also erroneousl­y claimed that Sgt. Speer was a medic, which therefore made his murder a ‘war crime’.

The fact is that Speer was a U.S. special forces operative with a medical specializa­tion. During the firefight he was armed and apparently dressed in local Afghan garb, meaning he was not targeted or deliberate­ly murdered because he was a medic. It was a battle, not a terrorist attack. Speer was a profession­al soldier, not a doctor.

Following his capture, Khadr would spend the next 10 years in the U.S. military’s detention center in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

In October 2010 Khadr pleaded guilty to “murder in violation of the laws of war.” He subsequent­ly renounced that confession, stating that it had only been made in order to secure his eventual release from Guantanamo Bay.

In September 2012, Khadr was repatriate­d to Canada to serve out the rest of the U.S. military imposed eight-year sentence.

He was out on bail by 2015 and on March 25, 2019, the Alberta court of Queen’s Bench declared his sentence complete.

This brings us back to the matter of the Canadian government authorizin­g a settlement of $10.5 million to Khadr in 2017. The payment was to settle a lawsuit brought by Khadr against the government for failing to respect his rights as a Canadian citizen under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

The linchpin of the case was a Supreme Court of Canada ruling which stated in 2010 that Khadr’s treatment in Guantanamo Bay ‘offend(ed) the most basic standard (of) the treatment of detained youth suspects.”

He did not get a payout because he was a terrorist. He was paid compensati­on for the decade that the Canadian government left a victimized child soldier to rot in a U.S. detention centre.

Let’s let Khadr speak about the victimizat­ion of child soldiers, for on that subject he certainly knows what he's talking about.

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