Khadr to Harper: Sorry to disappoint you

IdRatherBeSkiing

Satelitte Radio Addict
May 28, 2007
15,258
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Toronto, ON
What anyone believes is beside the point!

Facts are he pleaded guilty to the deaths. He is a convict and deserves to be treated as such. Everything else is wishful thinking and distorted beliefs by the kool aid gang. Of course you are the kool aid gang's grand pooh bah.
 

personal touch

House Member
Sep 17, 2014
3,023
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36
alberta/B.C.
Wrongfully convicted?

Exactly who are you to make that call?

As for the incarceration thingy, by rights, he should have been locked-up in an Afghan jail (tried in an Afghan Court as well).... The Omar apologists should thank their lucky stars that he went to Gitmo instead of the Afghan system



... Even more 'properly convicted' individuals have pleaded guilty, so, how does this fact alter your views?



Planting IEDs is also a technique... Wonder if Khadr will be describing this wee element in his book, or maybe there will be a section on Bundt Cake recipes



I get it now... When Khadr says something, it qualifies as fact... When an opposing position is forwarded, it is solely supposition and allegations.

gotcha
are you sure you are not Gerryh?you sound like it,..full of doubt,pessimism,oldness,beligerance,and sympathetic to a mismanged Canadian administration of law system,and of course intolerant to others opinion,yes you are the "gotcha"type,no doubt about it,and so is gerryh,birds of feather flock together.
yu "got me",i don't mind providing you esteem loftiness and joy
you are welcome,no need to thank me any further.
 

personal touch

House Member
Sep 17, 2014
3,023
0
36
alberta/B.C.
this is good the families are suing,
this opens a benificial information process,
information auditors will love this process of law,
in the end the Canadian governement will be sued,
sounds like a great plan.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
548
113
Vernon, B.C.
Facts are he pleaded guilty to the deaths. He is a convict and deserves to be treated as such. Everything else is wishful thinking and distorted beliefs by the kool aid gang. Of course you are the kool aid gang's grand pooh bah.

I believe he was for 11 years! How many more would you care for?
 

captain morgan

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 28, 2009
28,429
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A Mouse Once Bit My Sister
are you sure you are not Gerryh?you sound like it,..full of doubt,pessimism,oldness,beligerance,and sympathetic to a mismanged Canadian administration of law system,and of course intolerant to others opinion,yes you are the "gotcha"type,no doubt about it,and so is gerryh,birds of feather flock together.
yu "got me",i don't mind providing you esteem loftiness and joy
you are welcome,no need to thank me any further.

Everything I stated in my earlier post is a fair assessment and also realistic.

If you elect to romanticize the situation, that's your decision, but don't get your knickers all in a twist when someone else disagrees
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
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Omar Khadr's official criminal record in Canada contains oddities and errors that are at odds with how the federal government viewed him on his return from the notorious prison on the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

The record, obtained by The Canadian Press, makes no reference to the fact that Khadr, 30, was convicted by an internationally condemned U.S. military commission for purported offences he committed as a 15-year-old in Afghanistan.

Instead, the document states only that he was convicted at "Guantanamo Bay, Cuba (Youth Court)." It makes no reference anywhere to the United States or the commission.

While it's not clear when the record was first created, Khadr's Canadian lawyers call it bizarre. For one thing, they note there's no such thing as a Guantanamo Bay youth court.

However, despite the document, the Canadian government argued strenuously for years against treating Khadr as a young offender — placing him, for example, in a series of maximum security adult prisons on his return to Canada in September 2012.

Additionally, the lawyers say, the record appears to formalize the fact that Khadr was convicted as a youth for alleged crimes that occurred in a war zone, which would make him a child soldier — a label the government has also always avoided.

Dennis Edney, one of Khadr's lawyers, who was initially unaware of the document, expressed profound surprise at its contents.
"There's not such a being as a criminal youth court in Guantanamo," Edney said from Edmonton. "Why would you do that? Internationally, the place was condemned because it didn't distinguish between Omar being a child and Omar being an adult."

The Americans captured the horrifically wounded Khadr in the rubble of a bombed out compound in Afghanistan in July 2002 following a fierce firefight that left an American special forces soldier dead and another partly blinded.

Edney said it's important people understand the context of the convictions — something sorely lacking in the official record.

"It shows absolute ignorance. It misstates itself in a very fundamental way," Edney said. "It shows no understanding of what Guantanamo is (and) demands an explanation as to why it is so described."

The RCMP document also erroneously states that Khadr was sentenced to five concurrent eight-year terms for each of his five charges, In fact, Canadian courts have ruled Khadr was handed a single eight-year sentence on all counts.

Co-counsel Nate Whitling, who also had not seen the document, called it unsurprising Khadr has a record in Canada given his transfer here to serve out his sentence. But Whitling still called it "weird." He noted there's no such thing as a concurrent sentence at Guantanamo Bay, and suggested Canadian authorities had "tried to fit a square peg into a round hole."

Omar Khadr
 

DaSleeper

Trolling Hypocrites
May 27, 2007
33,676
1,666
113
Northern Ontario,
The question is what kind of deal did Obama give Canadian government to accept a murderer?


It couldn't be as good as the deal as he made with Iran.....


Made the snowflakes happy happy tho!