|
|||||||||
Bishops ask government to repatriate Khadr Canadian
Catholic News
Americans have
detained Khadr at Guantanamo since 2002, when he was wounded and captured
on the battlefield in Afghanistan. O’Brien
notes that Khadr was only 15 when he was captured after a firefight with
American soldiers and “could be considered a child soldier.” The archbishop
wrote that the Supreme Court of Canada concluded that Canada had infringed
Khadr’s rights under the charter to life, liberty and security of
the person, and reminded Nicholson Canada had signed the Convention on
the Rights of the Child in 1991 and the Optional Protocol to the Convention
on the Rights of the Child in 2000. “If Canada
recognizes the reality of child soldiers, it is important to recall that
their personal sense of responsibility can be seriously affected by ideological
indoctrination which may distort their judgment,” he wrote. “For
this reason, Canada has a duty to act in conformity with its Charter of
Rights and Freedoms.” O’Brien
acknowledged the court did not order the government to repatriate Khadr,
because it recognized the constitutional responsibility of the executive
in matters of foreign affairs. The archbishop emphasized, however, that
the “fundamental rights and the dignity of the human person cannot
alter, nor be sacrificed in the name of any interest.” Khadr faces
charges of murder, attempted murder and providing material support for
terrorism. He is alleged to have tossed a grenade that killed an army
medic. Though born
in the Toronto area, Khadr was raised in Pakistan. His father was a fundraiser
for al-Qaida and exposed his four sons to radical Islam. |
|
||||||||