Yahoo – AFP,
July 4, 2017
Montreal
(AFP) - Canada is set to apologize and award millions of dollars of
compensation to a former Guantanamo detainee who was captured in Afghanistan at
the age of 15 and pleaded guilty to killing a US soldier, reports said Tuesday.
Omar Khadr
will receive at least Can$10 million ($8 million US) from the federal
government for the treatment he was subjected to during his captivity,
according to reports in the Globe and Mail and Toronto Star which cited
anonymous sources.
Khadr, a
Canadian citizen, became the youngest prisoner at the US detention camp in Cuba
following his capture from Afghanistan in 2002.
Canada's
Supreme Court in 2010 ruled that his rights had been violated by Ottawa, which
shared statements he made to Canadian officials with the United States.
While at
Guantanamo, he was sentenced in 2010 to eight years plus time already served
for murdering a US soldier with a grenade, attempted murder, conspiracy,
providing material support for terrorism and spying.
He won the
right to be extradited and was sent home to Canada in 2012 to serve the
remainder of his sentence.
His lawyers
fought for several years to have his status as a minor at the time of the
attack recognized. Canada's Supreme Court finally agreed one week before his
conditional release in 2015.
His legal
team was pursuing Can$20 million against the Canadian government because his
rights as a prisoner were violated.
Public
Safety Canada said the government was not in a position to provide additional
information owing to the strictly confidential nature of the case.
"There
is a judicial process underway that has been underway for a number of years
now, and we are anticipating, like I think a number of people are, that that
judicial process is coming to its conclusion," Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau told reporters in Ireland.
The ruling
has precedent. In March, Ottawa apologized to three of its citizens who were
tortured in Syria, allegedly with the indirect participation of Canadian
officials.
The
government said it had settled civil suits with three Canadian nationals --
Abdullah Almalki, Ahmad Abou Elmaati and Muayyed Nureddin -- who were arrested
and tortured in Syrian custody just after the 9/11 attacks and detained until
2004.
In a
similar case, Canadian computer engineer Maher Arar was tortured in a Damascus
prison in 2002, after he was transferred there by US officials based on a
Canadian tip-off.
But Arar
was later cleared of any suspicion by the Canadian authorities, and in January
2007 won an apology from then prime minister Stephen Harper and Can$10 million
in compensation from the Canadian government.

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