Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Omar Khadr To Be Free On Bail After Almost 13 Years In Prison For War Crimes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 May, 2015 12:38 PM
    EDMONTON — Omar Khadr is expected to be released from prison soon after an Alberta Court of Appeal justice rejected a last-ditch government attempt to keep the Guantanamo Bay prisoner behind bars.
     
    Justice Myra Bielby ruled the government failed to prove that allowing Khadr out now would cause "irreparable harm" to Canada's international treaty obligations.
     
    Khadr was in the courtroom and let out a smile when Bielby announced her decision.
     
    It will be Khadr's first taste of freedom in almost 13 years, since his capture as a wounded 15-year-old in Afghanistan in July 2002.
     
    "Mr. Khadr, you're free to go," Bielby said.
     
    A spokesman for Minister of Public Safety Steven Blaney said the government was disappointed with the decision.
     
    "(We) regret that a convicted terrorist has been allowed back into Canadian society without having served his full sentence," Jeremy Laurin said in a statement.
     
    Bielby's ruling comes after Tuesday's 11th-hour attempt by Ottawa to keep the 28-year-old Khadr behind bars.
     
    A lower court judge had granted Khadr bail last month while he appeals his war crimes conviction in the United States.
     
    Khadr is now expected to be freed later today under conditions that include wearing a tracking bracelet.
     
    Among his other restrictions, Khadr will have to observe a night-time curfew, face limits on contact with his Toronto family, and live with his lawyer, Dennis Edney, and wife Patricia at their home in Edmonton.
     
    After the ruling, Edney hugged and kissed his wife, who was crying uncontrollably, as others cheered in the courtroom.
     
    Moments later, Edney said he was incredibly delighted with the decision.
     
    "It's taken too many years to get to this point," he said. "I look forward to Omar Khadr letting the Canadian public see who he is, to challenge the lies of this government who has not allowed him to be seen or speak to you."
     
    The government had argued that releasing Khadr from Bowden Institution near Innisfail, Alta., would undermine the treaty under which the U.S. returned him to Canada to serve out his eight-year sentence in 2012.
     
    Khadr's lawyers called that purely speculative, saying no other Canadian prisoner abroad is in a similar situation.
     
    They also pointed to the fact that he's been a model prisoner who was recently classified as a minimum security, and he could be released on parole in June.
     
    Documents in support of the reclassification include a recent wide-ranging interview Khadr did with a prison psychologist in which he denounces terrorism and says he wants to win people's trust and respect.
     
    "I've screwed up in the past, and I'm worried it will haunt me," Khadr told the psychologist. "People will think I'm the same person as I was 12 or 13 years ago."
     
    He also said he still suffers nightmares of the brutal firefight in July 2002 in Afghanistan in which he was almost killed before the Americans captured him.
     
    Conditions Omar Khadr must observe if released on bail
     
    EDMONTON — If Omar Khadr is released on $5,000 bail Thursday, the clock will stop ticking on the time served toward his eight-year sentence. He also faces numerous conditions, including:
     
    — Must wear an electronic monitoring device.
     
    — Must live with his lawyer Dennis Edney and wife Patricia in Edmonton.
     
    — Must observe a nightly curfew from 10 p.m. to 7 a.m.
     
    — Cannot leave Alberta without prior approval, except to visit Edneys' vacation home in B.C. 
     
    — May only contact his family by telephone or video under Edneys' supervision, and chat must be in English.
     
    — May only have in-person visits with his family with prior approval from bail supervisor.
     
    — Any Internet access will be restricted and must be monitored and supervised.
     
    SOURCE: Alberta Court of Queen's Bench

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Royal Winnipeg Ballet Dismisses Photographer It Says Police Are Investigating

    Royal Winnipeg Ballet Dismisses Photographer It Says Police Are Investigating
    WINNIPEG — The Royal Winnipeg Ballet has dismissed an instructor and photographer who is reportedly under a police investigation over nude photos of dancers.

    Royal Winnipeg Ballet Dismisses Photographer It Says Police Are Investigating

    Duffy Contract Covered Cost Of Prime Minister's Makeup At G8/G10 Event

    Duffy Contract Covered Cost Of Prime Minister's Makeup At G8/G10 Event
    OTTAWA — The cost of Stephen Harper's makeup for a public event in 2010 was covered by a fund at the heart of several criminal charges being faced by suspended senator Mike Duffy, court heard Thursday. 

    Duffy Contract Covered Cost Of Prime Minister's Makeup At G8/G10 Event

    Environmentalists Reactivate Pesticide Lawsuit Against Federal Government

    Environmentalists Reactivate Pesticide Lawsuit Against Federal Government
    Environmental groups have revived a lawsuit against the federal government because the Health Department changed its mind about reviewing a pesticide that is banned in Norway but is increasingly common in Canada.

    Environmentalists Reactivate Pesticide Lawsuit Against Federal Government

    Homicide Investigators In Burnaby After Man's Body Found On Street

    Homicide Investigators In Burnaby After Man's Body Found On Street
    Mounties say the man's body was discovered by a uniformed officer on routine patrol just before 3 a.m. Thursday (at the intersection of Moscrop Street and Smith Avenue).

    Homicide Investigators In Burnaby After Man's Body Found On Street

    PM Narendra Modi Gets Raucous Welcome From Thousands In Toronto But Some Canadians Are Not Happy

    PM Narendra Modi Gets Raucous Welcome From Thousands In Toronto But Some Canadians Are Not Happy
    Near the arena, a group of about 150 protesters chanted slogans such as "Modi is a terrorist" and called for Modi's prosecution. Sikh advocacy groups allege his "acts and omissions" resulted in a massacre of Muslims in his state in 2002.

    PM Narendra Modi Gets Raucous Welcome From Thousands In Toronto But Some Canadians Are Not Happy

    Robert Brandt, Kevin Wang Identified As Poliots Of BC Plane That Crashed On Vancouver's North Shore

    Robert Brandt, Kevin Wang Identified As Poliots Of BC Plane That Crashed On Vancouver's North Shore
    The BC Coroners Service says 34-year-old Robert Brandt was the pilot and 32-year-old Kevin Wang was co-piloting the twin-engine Swearingen SA-226 plane.

    Robert Brandt, Kevin Wang Identified As Poliots Of BC Plane That Crashed On Vancouver's North Shore