Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Lawyer Argues Omar Khadr Has Right To Bail Like Any Other Prisoner In Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Mar, 2015 11:35 AM

    EDMONTON — A lawyer for former Guantanamo Bay inmate Omar Khadr says his client's appeal in the United States is taking too long and he should be released on bail.

    Nathan Whitling (WHIHT'-ling) is asking an Edmonton judge to grant the 28-year-old Khadr bail while he appeals his war-crimes conviction before a U.S. military court.

    Whitling says Khadr has a right to seek bail just like every other prisoner in Canada.

    If released, Khadr plans to live in Edmonton with one of his other lawyers, and a university has agreed he can enrol there as a student.

    The federal government is arguing that a Canadian court doesn't have the jurisdiction to grant bail on a foreign sentence.

    It also says allowing Khadr out would subvert international law and damage Canada's relationship with the United States.

    Khadr is more than half-way through an eight-year sentence that he is serving at Bowden Institution in central Alberta.

    He admitted to five war crimes committed when he was a 15-year-old in Afghanistan in July 2002, but has said he only pleaded guilty to get out of Guantanamo.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Social Media Contributes To Winter Negativity

    Social Media Contributes To Winter Negativity
    HALIFAX — People in storm-battered Atlantic Canada might be fixated on winter, but a psychology professor says tweeting about it isn't the best way to blow off steam.

    Social Media Contributes To Winter Negativity

    Judge Denies Kamloops Man's Plea To Have Seized Marijuana Plants Returned

    Judge Denies Kamloops Man's Plea To Have Seized Marijuana Plants Returned
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A provincial court judge has denied a Kamloops, B.C., man's application to be reunited with 10 medical marijuana plants that were seized by RCMP last summer.

    Judge Denies Kamloops Man's Plea To Have Seized Marijuana Plants Returned

    PM Harper Tweets Inaccurate Picture Of NBAers During Canadian Basketball Night

    PM Harper Tweets Inaccurate Picture Of NBAers During Canadian Basketball Night
    A post from the prime minister's official Twitter account showed a picture of him with Canadian basketball stars Andrew Wiggins and Anthony Bennett, both members of the Minnesota Timberwolves.

    PM Harper Tweets Inaccurate Picture Of NBAers During Canadian Basketball Night

    Balance Or Bust? Debate Emerges Over Feds' Push To Eliminate Deficit In 2015

    The Harper government's stubborn push to eliminate the deficit in its election-year budget has opened a debate: should it even bother scrambling to balance the books at all, particularly with the financial sting of the oil slump?

    Balance Or Bust? Debate Emerges Over Feds' Push To Eliminate Deficit In 2015

    Jury Reaches Verdict For One Of Two Via Terror Suspects; Impasse For Other

    Jury Reaches Verdict For One Of Two Via Terror Suspects; Impasse For Other
    TORONTO — A Toronto jury has decided the fate of one of two men accused in an alleged terror plot to derail a passenger train, but will continue deliberating today on some of the charges against his co-accused.

    Jury Reaches Verdict For One Of Two Via Terror Suspects; Impasse For Other

    Fear Around Insanity Defence Found Groundless

    Fear Around Insanity Defence Found Groundless
    TORONTO — The notion that cold-blooded killers and violent offenders are taking advantage of a soft-on-crime justice system by feigning psychiatric illness to win a verdict of not criminally responsible and avoid punishment is a myth, a new study finds.

    Fear Around Insanity Defence Found Groundless