Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Khadr affidavit alleges abuse

This is from CBC. Many people will simply write off Khadr's allegations. The article could have noted that there is plenty of corroborating evidence plus the fact that one of his main interrogators has actually been court-martialed and sent to jail for abuse of detainees!
No mention in this article either that other countries such as France have intervened in the case on Kahdr's behalf but not Canada. Harper knows that intervening may please a few lawyers and human rights activists but many Canadians seem to think that given that Khadr is a member of a family of terrorists except for the kid who was a CIA spy that it doesn't matter his trial is a mockery of justice.

Khadr affidavit alleges abuse, rape threats
Court document shows Khadr's first comments since 2002 detention
Last Updated: Tuesday, March 18, 2008 | 4:35 PM ET Comments25Recommend29The Associated Press
Canadian Omar Khadr says U.S. military interrogators in Afghanistan threatened him with rape and treated him harshly, forcing him to make false statements, according to an affidavit released Tuesday.



In this courtroom sketch from June 2007, Canadian Omar Khadr, far left, sits flanked by two civilian and one military lawyer at Guantanamo U.S. Naval Base in Cuba.
(Janet Hamlin/Associated Press)
Khadr, who is accused of killing U.S. medic Sgt. First Class Christopher Speer with a grenade in a 2002 firefight in Afghanistan, also alleged that guards at the U.S. naval base in Cuba abused him while he was weak from a hunger strike.

He said they kneed him repeatedly in the thighs and grabbed him by pressure points behind his ears, under his jaw and on his neck.

"On a scale of one to ten, I would say the pain was an eleven," Khadr said.

Military censors who checked the affidavit before it was released blacked out Khadr's allegations of how U.S. soldiers inflicted pain on him at Bagram air base in Afghanistan.

The Toronto-born Khadr, who was 15 when he was wounded and captured, is expected to go on trial at Guantanamo this summer before America's first war crimes tribunals since the Second World War era. His lawyers say the abuse allegations raise doubts about the government's evidence.

After being taken to Bagram with two gunshot wounds in his back, Khadr said he was questioned by soldiers who sat beside his stretcher. A photograph published by the Toronto Star this month, taken as U.S. soldiers treated Khadr in the aftermath of the firefight, showed he had two gaping exit wounds in his chest.

Two weeks into his detention, Khadr said, he was moved from the hospital directly to an interrogation room.

"During the interrogations, the pain was taking my thoughts away," Khadr said. Most details of his sessions were redacted from the affidavit by censors. Khadr said that on some occasions, soldiers covered his head with a bag and brought barking dogs into the room.

"I figured out right away that I would simply tell them whatever I thought they wanted to hear in order to keep them from causing me (redacted)," Khadr said.

A Pentagon spokesman would not immediately comment on Khadr's allegations.

'Life got much worse for me'
Defence lawyers filed the affidavit ahead of a pre-trial hearing at Guantanamo last week. It was released to journalists Tuesday after the military censored it.

Khadr's Navy lawyer, Lt. Cmdr. William Kuebler, said Khadr's abuse allegations undermine the validity of statements he made while being interrogated.

Khadr, who has been held at Guantanamo since October 2002, said that after telling the Americans there that his previous statements were untrue, "life got much worse for me." The only unredacted portion of the ensuing account says a Navy interrogator pulled his hair and spat in his face.

Khadr, the son of a suspected al-Qaeda financier, is charged with murder in the death of the soldier and is accused of planting mines against U.S. convoys.

He is among the first of roughly 80 detainees the Pentagon plans to prosecute at Guantanamo, which holds about 275 men on suspicion of links to al-Qaeda or the Taliban.

© The Canadian Press, 2008

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