Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Bail Decision For Former Guantanamo Bay Inmate Omar Khadr In Hands Of Edmonton Judge

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Mar, 2015 10:47 AM

    EDMONTON — An Edmonton judge says she needs time to decide whether a former Guantanamo Bay inmate should get bail.

    A two-day hearing has concluded for Omar Khadr and the judge is to give her decision at a later date.

    Khadr pleaded guilty in 2010 to five war-crimes charges, including murder, for killing a U.S. soldier in Afghanistan when Khadr was 15.

    Now 28, he is more than halfway through an eight-year sentence and is a prisoner at Bowden Institution in central Alberta.

    Khadr's lawyers say he should be released while he appeals his war-crimes conviction before a U.S. military court because the process is taking too long.

    Federal government lawyers argue that letting Khadr out would undermine public confidence in the justice system, subvert international law and damage Canada's relationship with the United States.

    If released on bail, Khadr plans to live in Edmonton with one of his lawyers, and a university has agreed to let him enrol as a student.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Conservative MP Says Fifty Shades Of Grey Supports Violence Against Women

    Conservative MP Says Fifty Shades Of Grey Supports Violence Against Women
    WINNIPEG — A Manitoba MP is calling for a boycott of "Fifty Shades of Grey," claiming the film supports humiliation, degradation and the emotional and physical abuse of women.

    Conservative MP Says Fifty Shades Of Grey Supports Violence Against Women

    Winter Storm Wallops Maritimes While Central Canada Spends Sunday In Deep Freeze

    Winter Storm Wallops Maritimes While Central Canada Spends Sunday In Deep Freeze
    HALIFAX — A savage winter storm pounded Maritimes on Sunday, causing damage, delays and dangerous driving conditions on Sunday while people in parts of southern Ontario and Quebec were braving biting winds and frigid Arctic temperatures.

    Winter Storm Wallops Maritimes While Central Canada Spends Sunday In Deep Freeze

    Canada's Iconic Maple Leaf Flag Turns 50

    OTTAWA - Some mornings, Parliament Hill's flag master likes to see how fast he can trot up 392 stairs in the Peace Tower, raise the Maple Leaf that flies over top, and climb back down.

    Canada's Iconic Maple Leaf Flag Turns 50

    Government To Introduce Legislation Monday To End Rail Strike: Source

    Government To Introduce Legislation Monday To End Rail Strike: Source
    OTTAWA — The federal government will introduce legislation to end a strike by more than 3,000 members of the Teamsters against Canadian Pacific Railway.

    Government To Introduce Legislation Monday To End Rail Strike: Source

    Alberta Mayor Ted Clugston Charged With Impaired Driving

    Alberta Mayor Ted Clugston Charged With Impaired Driving
    Medicine Hat Police Chief Andy McGrogan confirms in a statement posted online that the city's mayor, Ted Clugston, was arrested early Friday morning.

    Alberta Mayor Ted Clugston Charged With Impaired Driving

    Canadian Soldiers Face More Abuse In Childhood: Study

    Canadian Soldiers Face More Abuse In Childhood: Study
    OTTAWA - Canadian soldiers appear to be more likely than their civilian counterparts to have experienced abuse, including corporal punishment, or to have witnessed domestic violence as children, new research aimed at exploring the incidence of depression and suicide in the military suggests.

    Canadian Soldiers Face More Abuse In Childhood: Study