Friday, June 26, 2026
ADVT 
National

Harper Appears Unmoved Following Omar Khadr's Release On Bail, Public Statements

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 May, 2015 01:15 PM
    OTTAWA — Omar Khadr's apologetic tone didn't seem to move Stephen Harper much Friday as the prime minister defended his Conservative government's efforts to keep the former Guantanamo Bay prisoner behind bars.
     
    "Mr. Khadr, as we all know, pled guilty to very grave crimes, including murder," Harper told a news conference as he offered his thoughts and prayers to the family members of U.S. Sgt. Christopher Speer.
     
    "Our government's priority in these matters is always to make sure, first and foremost, we keep in mind the protection and security of the Canadian population."
     
    Harper said little else, citing the fact the matter remains before the courts.
     
     Khadr, now 28, pleaded guilty in October 2010 before a widely discredited military commission to five war crimes — including murder in the death of Speer, a U.S. special forces soldier.
     
    On Thursday, he walked free after an Alberta judge rejected the government's last-ditch attempt to block his release, saying they had failed to prove Khadr posed a risk to the public or could do harm to Canadian interests.
     
    Some hours later, during a remarkable news conference on his lawyer's Edmonton driveway, Khadr apologized for the pain he's caused and urged Canadians to give him a chance to demonstrate his worth.
     
    "I will prove to them that I'm more than what they thought of me, I'll prove to them that I'm a good person," Khadr said.
     
    "Give me a chance — see who I am as a person, not as a name — and then they can make their own judgment after that."
     
     
    Khadr spent almost 13 years behind bars — four of them as a convicted war criminal.
     
    He was captured, badly wounded, by American forces in Afghanistan in July 2002, when he was 15 years old. At one time, he was the youngest prisoner at the American prison compound in Guantanamo Bay.
     
    After his release on bail, he offered a comment on Harper's hard-line stance: "I'm going to have to disappoint him, I'm better than the person he thinks I am."
     
    Justice Minister Peter MacKay sounded a slightly more conciliatory note than his boss Friday, saying Khadr's public declaration that he had renounced violence was a good first step after his release from prison.
     
    MacKay, speaking at an event in Halifax, said people shouldn't lose sight of the fact that Khadr was involved in terrorism.
     
    "What I hope will happen is that Mr. Khadr will abide by Canadian laws, respect people's safety, and he is now is a position where he is going to be given that opportunity to prove that," he said.
     
    "Let's look ahead with optimism, but with caution, when it comes to individuals who have past proven tendencies that have resulted in the loss of human life."
     
    After Khadr's release, a spokesperson for Public Safety Minister Steven Blaney said the minister regretted that a convicted terrorist had been released without having served his full sentence.
     
    Khadr's release came with a list of restrictions, including wearing a tracking bracelet and a curfew.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Calgary mayor says gay-straight alliance bill 'damaging and hateful'

    Calgary mayor says gay-straight alliance bill 'damaging and hateful'
    Calgary's mayor says a now-delayed Alberta government bill about gay-straight alliances in schools would have focused international attention on "what kind of hillbillies we are."

    Calgary mayor says gay-straight alliance bill 'damaging and hateful'

    CMHC cutting 215 jobs in restructuring, adding to risk management and IT

    CMHC cutting 215 jobs in restructuring, adding to risk management and IT
    OTTAWA — The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. is cutting 215 jobs in a organization of the Crown corporation, which provides mortgage loan insurance and market statistics.

    CMHC cutting 215 jobs in restructuring, adding to risk management and IT

    Body Of A Missing BC Truck Driver Found In Mill's Wood-Chip Container After 2 Days

    Body Of A Missing BC Truck Driver Found In Mill's Wood-Chip Container After 2 Days
    The BC Coroners Service says workers at the Catalyst Paper Mill couldn't find 66-year-old Perry Thomas about a half hour after he arrived on Tuesday.

    Body Of A Missing BC Truck Driver Found In Mill's Wood-Chip Container After 2 Days

    Surrey Mother Charged With Murder In 8-year-old Daughter's Death, Father 'Devastated'

    Surrey Mother Charged With Murder In 8-year-old Daughter's Death, Father 'Devastated'
    "Life will never be the same after losing my daughter to murder. Our family courts and thus we all failed #Teagan," he wrote in abbreviated social-media style.

    Surrey Mother Charged With Murder In 8-year-old Daughter's Death, Father 'Devastated'

    Indo-Canadian Man Charged In Murder Of Surrey's Tarsem 'Shane' Singh

    Indo-Canadian Man Charged In Murder Of Surrey's Tarsem 'Shane' Singh
    SURREY, B.C. — A 33-year-old Randeep Singh Match has been charged with second-degree murder in the death of Tarsem Shane Dhaliwal whose body was found in a vehicle in Surrey, B.C.  

    Indo-Canadian Man Charged In Murder Of Surrey's Tarsem 'Shane' Singh

    Rain And Wind Hammer B.C. South Coast Prompting Swollen Rivers And A Mudslide

    Rain And Wind Hammer B.C. South Coast Prompting Swollen Rivers And A Mudslide
    QUALICUM BEACH, B.C. — Torrential rain and strong winds carried by a series of weather systems have hammered British Columbia's south coast and more is to come.

    Rain And Wind Hammer B.C. South Coast Prompting Swollen Rivers And A Mudslide