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Omar Ahmed Khadr Omar Ahmed Khadr al-Qaeda Home Front: WoT 20051111 Link

Great White North
Guantanamo ex-Inmate Granted Bail in Canada, Release Likely in May
2015-04-25
[AnNahar] A Canadian court on Friday granted bail to former Guantanamo detainee Omar Baby Face Khadr, who was 15 when he was captured on an Afghan battlefield in 2002 and sent to the U.S. jail in Cuba.

The Canadian government, however, said it would appeal the bail decision.

Khadr's lawyer Nathan Whitling told AFP the conditions of his release -- granted pending the outcome of the appeal of his U.S. conviction over the killing of a U.S. soldier in Afghanistan -- are to be determined at a hearing on May 5, when Khadr is expected to be freed.

"Even though the applicant has pleaded guilty to serious offenses, he should be granted judicial interim release because he has a strong basis for an appeal," the court said in its decision.

The Court of Queen's Bench of Alberta also found that "the risk to public safety is not such that it is in the public's best interest that he remain in pre-appeal detention in a manner that could render his appeal irrelevant."

Now 28, Khadr was sentenced to eight years in 2010 following a U.S. military hearing in which he agreed to plead guilty to murder in violation of the laws of war, attempted murder, conspiracy, providing material support for terrorism and spying.

He was repatriated to Canada after spending 10 years in the U.S. military prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba following his arrest as a teenager in Afghanistan.

Another of his Canadian attorneys, Dennis Edney, told public broadcaster CBC he has invited Khadr to stay at the lawyer's Edmonton, Alberta home.

Edney and his wife have also offered to pay Khadr's tuition at a local Christian college.

"He will go to school. He will continue his education. He will probably find some part time employment. He will live a normal life," Edney told CBC.

- U.S. appeal delayed -

Khadr's defenders requested bail pending the appeal of his war crimes conviction before the U.S. Court of Military Commission Review in the U.S. state of Virginia.

According to court documents, the U.S. appeal faces an "indeterminate delay."

Whitling argued in the Canadian court that Khadr had the right to request release the same as any other prisoner.

But the Canadian government argued that granting Khadr's application would undermine public confidence in the justice system, and risked harming Canada-U.S. relations.

The Crown also noted that Khadr waived his right to seek early release as part of a plea agreement with U.S. authorities.

However,
some men learn by reading. A few learn by observation. The rest have to pee on the electric fence for themselves...
Khadr has said he only agreed to the deal in order to get out of Guantanamo, where he was the youngest prisoner.

Ottawa is concerned that Khadr reveres his fundamentalist father, who was part of the late Osama bin Laden
... who is now among the dear departed, though not among the dearest...
's inner circle. The father was killed in a shootout in 2003 with Pak forces.

The Crown also expressed unease that his mother and siblings living in Toronto, according to a former public safety minister, "openly applauded (the father's) crimes and terrorist activities."

Public Safety Minister Steven Blaney said Ottawa is "disappointed" with the ruling.

"Omar Ahmed Khadr pleaded guilty to heinous crimes, including the murder of American Army medic Sergeant Christopher Speer," Blaney said.

"We have vigorously defended against any attempt to lessen his punishment for these crimes," he added.
Link


Fifth Column
Massive Terrorist Plot! NYT: See Page 30
2007-06-04
By Ben Johnson

This weekend, federal authorities foiled a stunning terrorist plot by Muslim extremists to kill thousands of our readers, strike the international transport grid, and depress the nation’s economy during its slowest quarter since late 2002 – but enough about that.

That was the message of Sunday’s New York Times.

The FBI had prevented four men, including a former member of Guyana’s parliament, from blowing up John F. Kennedy International Airport – and possibly part of Queens. They hoped to ignite underground fuel pipes, setting off a chain reaction of explosions that would envelop the entire complex. The NY Post and New York Daily News made it front page news. The NY Daily News headlined its story, “They Aimed to Kill Thousands.” The Post included a chilling sidebar, “Pipeline Security A Joke.”

The (inexplicably) most prestigious newspaper in the world put its bland story on page 30. Instead, page one featured yet another story about Guantanamo Bay detainees.

Any junior editor at any county newspaper in the country would have been fired for putting the most reported story in the nation two-and-a-half dozen pages into the well. Aside from burying a major international story that took place in its metro area, the Newspaper of Record took pains to make the Muslim battle plan that could have atomized a portion of its immediate readership appear utterly irrelevant.

The NYT began by obscuring the terrorists’ target. Although it faults the U.S. military for using the term “collateral damage,” the Times wrote as though the plotters only planned to blow up inanimate objects, certainly not human beings. Its opening line read, “Four men, including a onetime airport cargo handler and a former member of the Parliament of Guyana, were charged yesterday with plotting to blow up fuel tanks, terminal buildings and the web of fuel lines running beneath Kennedy International Airport.”

Secondly, it minimized the severity of the plot. JFK “was never in imminent danger because the plot was only in a preliminary phase and the conspirators had yet to lay out detailed plans or obtain financing or explosives.” Besides, “safety shut-off valves would almost assuredly have prevented an exploding airport fuel tank from igniting all or even part of the network.” Move along. Nothing to see here!

And, as they have for the last several plots (Ft. Dix, Miami, etc.), the Old Gray Lady portrayed the would-be mass killers as pathetic and sympathetic. Plot originator Russell Defreitas, 63, was “divorced and lost touch with his two children.” Once homeless, he moved into an apartment where “the weather was rough on his health and the cold was tough on his arthritis.” He now lives on “a run-down block full of graffiti.” He liked jazz, “especially the saxophone.” Friends described him as a “polite man” and “not that bright” – not bright enough to pull off a serious attack.

Much deeper into the story the crack staff fesses up: “Defreitas envisioned ‘the destruction of the whole of Kennedy” and theorized that because of underground pipes, ‘part of Queens would explode.’” He told his co-conspirators he wanted to inflict such massive loss of life that “even the twin towers can’t touch it.” Beyond crippling the U.S. economy (during a downturn), the move would have symbolic value, as well. Americans “love John F. Kennedy,” he said. “If you hit that, this whole country will be in mourning. It’s like you kill the man twice.” Apparently murdering the president’s brother once was not enough for Muslim extremists.

Later still, the Times notes that, while they weren’t al-Qaeda operatives, the four sought help from “extremist Muslim group based in Trinidad and Tobago called Jamaat al-Muslimeen.” They had “precise and extensive” surveillance of their target, which serves 1,000 flights a day. The quartet “was very familiar with the airport and how to access secure areas.” The plotters were motivated by “fundamentalist Islamic beliefs of a violent nature.” (Coincidentally, every terrorist who has killed Americans since the late Clinton administration has also shared “fundamentalist Islamic beliefs of a violent nature.” In fact, “Mr. Kadir, who, along with being a former elected official [in Guyana], is an imam.”) An unnamed law enforcement official told reporters they stopped the plot early for a reason: “if we let it go it could have gotten [serious]; they could have gotten the J.A.M. fully involved, and we wouldn’t know where it could have gone.”

Oh, and one of the plotters is still at large. Perhaps getting “J.A.M. fully involved” now. “The fourth suspect, Abdel Nur, 57, remained a fugitive.”

Too busy to concentrate on news that doesn’t fit, the Times featured another front page story in which the terrorist is portrayed as a victim, this one set in Gitmo. The story begins:

The facts of Omar Ahmed Khadr’s case are grim. The shrapnel from the grenade he is accused of throwing ripped through the skull of Sgt. First Class Christopher J. Speer, who was 28 when he died.

To American military prosecutors, Mr. Khadr is a committed Al Qaeda operative, spy and killer who must be held accountable for killing Sergeant Speer in 2002 and for other bloody acts he committed in Afghanistan.

But there is one fact that may not fit easily into the government’s portrait of Mr. Khadr: He was 15 at the time.


Not only a mere teen, Khadr is:

the youngest detainee at Guantanamo Bay, nearly blind in one eye from injuries sustained during the July 2002 firefight in which Sergeant Speer was mortally wounded and another American soldier was severely injured. Last week, Mr. Khadr said he wanted to fire all of his American lawyers, and some of them said they understood why he might distrust Americans after five years at Guantanamo. (Emphasis added.)


His lawyer, Muneer I. Ahmad is – surprise! – an associate professor at the American University Washington College of Law. Saith Ahmad, “If Omar had had his free choice, what he would have chosen to do is ride horses, play soccer and read Harry Potter books.”

Another innocent betrayed by Bush’s War on Terror! Just like Hillary Clinton.

Only in the 17th and 18th paragraphs of the story do we learn Omar’s father, Ahmed Said Khadr, was a “senior deputy to Osama bin Laden,” and one of his brothers told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, “We are an al-Qaeda family.”

Moreover, the story grudgingly acknowledges international law does not forbid the United States from doing precisely what it is with Omar. Not only is this a non-story, it is an old non-story. FrontPage Magazine covered The Littlest Jihadist as early as 2002 and has run numerous stories about this extremist family, with its extensive ties to the 9/11 plotters. But to the Times, his alleged suffering trumps the suffering of its own readers.

In addition to this meager coverage of a legitimate threat, the NYT editorial page had not a single editorial on the threat to its readers’ hometown, although Sunday’s issue had three editorials targeting President Bush, Dick Cheney, and the “harsh” jurisprudence of Clarence Thomas.

The decisions to put a story portraying the plight of Guantanamo Bay’s beleaguered terrorist population on page one and to ignore the JFK plot in its editorial coverage were transparently political moves. While Muslim extremists wage a hot war against the United States – often centered in one of the bluest cities of the nation – the Left sees its war on President Bush as infinitely more important. Why do anything that would put the spotlight on terrorism, vindicate the present administration, or – worse yet – perhaps elect a Republican in 2008? The NYT would not take that chance, and it had no difficulty altering its news coverage to fit that political template.

Ultimately, said Mark J. Mershon, the assistant director in charge of the FBI’s New York office, the JFK plotters based their actions on “a pattern of hatred toward the United States and the West in general.” One suspects the same could be said of the New York Times.
Link


Great White North
Canada agrees to Qaeda suspect extradition hearing
2006-03-16
TORONTO (Reuters) - The Ontario Superior Court agreed on Thursday to hold an extradition hearing for a Canadian man who is wanted in the United States on charges of buying weapons for al Qaeda and conspiring to kill Americans abroad.
The court will set a date for the hearing on March 30. "The Attorney General of Canada commenced the extradition process of Abdullah Khadr," federal prosecutor Howard Piafsky told reporters outside the courtroom. "We will be seeking his extradition."

Abdullah Khadr, 24, faces charges in the United States of conspiracy to murder Americans abroad and of buying weapons for groups linked to Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda network. He could face a life sentence and a $1 million fine if convicted.

Khadr, who was arrested in Toronto in December two weeks after returning to Canada from Pakistan, is the eldest son of the late Ahmed Said Khadr, an alleged al Qaeda financier and close friend of bin Laden. His brother Omar Ahmed Khadr is the only Canadian held at the U.S. prison camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The United States formally requested Khadr's extradition in February.

Khadr has said he was tortured in a Pakistani prison where he was detained without charges from October 2004. His teenage brother Omar has been a prisoner at Guantanamo since 2002 and will face a trial by a U.S. military tribunal for murder. Another brother, Abdurahman Khadr, was also a prisoner at Guantanamo, but was freed.
Link


Great White North
US requests Khadr extradition
2006-02-16
The United States has formally requested the extradition of a Canadian man accused of supplying weapons to al Qaeda, but the process could take years, officials said on Wednesday. U.S. authorities say Abdullah Khadr, 24, also conspired to kill Americans abroad. Khadr was arrested in Toronto in December two weeks after returning to Canada from Pakistan.

Khadr is the eldest son of Ahmed Said Khadr, who was an alleged al Qaeda financier and close friend of Osama bin Laden. He was killed in a 2003 gun battle in Pakistan. Brother Omar Ahmed Khadr is the only Canadian held at the U.S. prison camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Canada's Justice Department now has 30 days to approve the U.S. request and if it says yes, a court hearing will be held to consider the extradition. Khadr can appeal that decision all the way to the Supreme Court, and it could be a long time before a final ruling is made. "We have (extradition) cases that have been around for five years," said a Justice Department spokesman.

Khadr said he was tortured in a Pakistani prison where he was detained without charges in October 2004.
Link


Great White North
Abdullah Khadr charged
2006-02-09
A federal grand jury in the United States formally charged a Canadian citizen on Wednesday with conspiracy to murder Americans outside the country and of buying weapons for groups linked to al Qaeda.

Abdullah Khadr, who is being held in Canada on an extradition warrant from the United States, was charged with four counts involving procurement of weapons for al Qaeda and could face a life sentence.

The 24-year-old is the eldest son of Ahmed Said Khadr, an alleged al Qaeda financier and close friend of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. His brother Omar Ahmed Khadr is the only Canadian held at the U.S. prison camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Michael Sullivan, the U.S. attorney in Boston where Khadr was charged, said in a statement he wants to extradite the Canadian to stand trial in the United States, where he could also face a $1 million fine if convicted.

"The indictment of Abdullah Khadr demonstrates the commitment of the United States to aggressively investigate and prosecute those who seek to kill Americans here or abroad," Sullivan said.

The indictment accuses Khadr of assisting his late father, Egyptian-born Canadian Ahmed Said Khadr, of supplying rockets, grenades, mines and other weapons to al Qaeda in 2003 for attacks against U.S. forces in Afghanistan.

The son was arrested on December 17 in Canada after he returned from Pakistan, the U.S. attorney's office in Boston said.

Khadr has said he was tortured in a Pakistani prison where he was detained without charges from October 2004. His teenage brother Omar has been a prisoner at Guantanamo since 2002 and will face a trial by a U.S. military tribunal for murder.

Another brother, Abdurahman Khadr, was also a prisoner at Guantanamo, but was freed. He told Canadian media he had been asked to work for the CIA.
Link


International-UN-NGOs
StrategyPage: Amnesty International Deceptions
2006-01-16
Amnesty International recently launched a new media campaign, focusing on the detention centers at Guantanamo Bay used to hold al Qaeda prisoners. This comes roughly seven months after they compared these centers to the Soviet-era gulags, and shows that Amnesty International still has a soft spot for terrorists.

The target of this campaign is not just the centers, but the military tribunals as well. What this ignores is that many of these detainees are not exactly angels. In fact, some have committed out-and-out war crimes.

  • One Canadian detainee, Omar Ahmed Khadr, is slated to face a military tribunal for the murder of a U.S. Army medic. Medics are protected under the Geneva Conventions – deliberately killing a medic (or firing at a hospital) is a huge no-no.

  • An evidence summary for a detainee from Iraq, reported that he traveled to Pakistan with an Iraqi intelligence officer for purposes of launching a chemical mortar attack on the American and British embassies.

  • In at least a dozen cases, detainees released from Guantanamo Bay have re-joined al-Qaeda on the battlefield. One of these detainees, Rasul Kudayev, planned attacks in the Kabardino-Balkariya, in the Northern Caucasus that killed 45 people.

  • In these tribunals, numerous efforts are being taken to ensure that the detainees facing tribunals are fairly treated. In the case of Khadr, a recent hearing was held over press coverage of the case. In another instance, efforts are being made to ensure that a detainee who was a close associate of bin Laden has adequate counsel, particularly during portions of the trial where classified evidence is being used.

    Amnesty International has also repeated the reports of torture and other mistreatment, reports which have been generally discredited (and in the cases where mistreatment did occur, corrective action was taken). For instance, a detainee was responsible for the Koran-flushing incident. Amnesty International also failed to mention that in some of the cases where abuse was alleged, there was provocation (in one instance, a detainee spat on a female interrogator).

    This is also not the only time that Amnesty International has sided with people who could be charitably described as slimy. In 2001, Amnesty International filed suit to get CIA documents pertaining to the 1993 effort to take down Pablo Escobar, the leader of the Medellin drug cartel. Later that year, Amnesty International waged a campaign that ultimately resulted in the release of Ahmed Hikmat Shakir from Jordanian custody. Shakir is an Iraqi national who escorted at least one of the hijackers of the airliner that flew into the Pentagon through Malaysian customs in January 2000, prior to attending the al-Qaeda summit held that same month. When taken into custody in Qatar, Shakir had contact information for the safe houses used in the 1993 attack on the World Trade Center and information on the 1995 al-Qaeda plot to destroy airliners over the Pacific Ocean. Amnesty International has highlighted fifteen detainees in its alerts, and has claimed that eight have been released.

    The Amnesty International campaign is one that has been remarkably resilient in the face of facts, and seems to take the word of terrorists at face value – despite the fact that al-Qaeda manuals instruct captured members to falsely claim torture. Given that several detainees, most notably Kudayev, have returned to the fight, the results of Amnesty International’s campaign could have a negative impact on the human rights of innocent people.
    Link


    Home Front: WoT
    Guantanamo Lawyers Prepare for Hearings
    2006-01-11
    GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba (AP) - Military prosecutors at this U.S. naval base geared up Tuesday for hearings for a Canadian teenager accused of killing a U.S. soldier in Afghanistan, while his defense attorney called the process a ``sham.''

    Toronto-born Omar Ahmed Khadr was 15 and a Taliban fighter when he was captured by U.S. forces in Afghanistan after he allegedly tossed a grenade, killing a U.S. Special Forces medic in a battle, and planted mines targeting U.S. convoys.
    And he's still alive?
    Now 19, Khadr is charged with murder, attempted murder, aiding the enemy and conspiracy. His pretrial hearing is scheduled for Wednesday along with a hearing for Ali Hamza Ahmad Sulayman al Bahlul, a Yemeni charged with conspiracy. The administrative hearings could include setting schedules for their trials. If convicted, both face up to life in prison.

    Muneer Ahmad, Khadr's civilian attorney, claimed the hearings don't conform to generally accepted legal principles as he wishes them to be and said the defense team has challenged the commission's legality in federal court. ``The hearing room ... is designed to look like a court. The presiding officer will be wearing a black robe,'' Ahmad said Tuesday. ``But understand that the room is not a court and the presiding officer is not a judge and this is not a full and fair trial. No matter how they dress it up, the military commission is still a sham.''
    It's a military commission, not a civilian trial. One would think a lawyer would know the difference.
    Air Force Col. Morris Davis, the chief prosecutor, denied that was the case. ``We've got nothing to be ashamed of in what we're doing here,'' Davis said. ``We're extending a full, fair and open trial to the terrorists that have attacked us.''

    Al Bahlul has challenged the military's appointment of defense council, saying he would like to defend himself.
    By all means, I'm sure the jury of E-7's and E-8's wuld enjoy the show.
    That issue could be decided Wednesday, said Maj. Jane Boomer, a spokeswoman for the Office of Military Commissions. It will be al Bahlul's second time before the commission.
    Link


    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.
    Link



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