14)
RELEASE OMAR KHADR NOW!
(The
following
articles are from the May 1-15, 2008, issue of People's Voice, Canada's
leading communist newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the
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Statement
by the Central Executive Committee, Communist Party of Canada, April
17, 2008
As more light is
shed on the case of Omar Khadr, it becomes increasingly obvious to the
world that the Pentagon's prosecution of this young Canadian "child
soldier" is a sickening violation of international legal standards and
human rights.
The charges
of murder and other serious crimes against Khadr have already been
dismissed twice, amply demonstrating the lack of any real evidence that
he killed a U.S. soldier. On each occasion, the charges have been
renewed by a U.S. military seeking to justify its wars of occupation.
Captured
during a firefight in Afghanistan in July 2002, Khadr was just 15 at
the time - a child soldier. Charges were not laid until he had spent
years in Guantanamo, a violation of his right to a fair and timely
trial. Then last year, a military judge tossed out the charges because
Khadr was classed as an "enemy combatant", which should have granted
him the right to be held under the Geneva Conventions and the laws of
war, not locked up under horrifying conditions for years without
adequate legal counsel. But the U.S. military said it would appeal, and
marched Omar Khadr back to solitary detention.
Since then,
the case has disintegrated in the face of new evidence. Revelations in
pre-trial proceedings have shown that nobody saw Omar Khadr toss the
grenade which allegedly killed a U.S. soldier. At least one other
wounded combatant was still resisting the U.S. attack, and could have
thrown a grenade before he was shot in the head and killed. Another
distinct possibility is that the U.S. soldier may have been hit by
"friendly fire" during the confusing battle. Omar Khadr himself,
immobile and facing away from his attackers, was shot twice in the back
but survived his injuries.
Despite the
prosecution claims to be conducting the case in an open and fair
manner, most of the new evidence has emerged by accident, such as the
unplanned release to reporters of documents which were supposed to be
censored.
Just as
significant, Omar Khadr is charged under the Military Commission Act,
which was never intended for the prosecution of juveniles. As his
defence attorneys have pointed out, the prosecution's position would
open the door to military-based charges against even a five-year-old.
Omar Khadr is
the last citizen of a western country still detained in Guantanamo.
Every other country whose citizens have been sucked into this vortex of
torture and solitary confinement has vigorously demanded the return of
these prisoners. But in line with Stephen Harper's position that every
arbitrary violation of human rights by the U.S. Empire must be given
complete support, not a finger has been lifted by the Tory government
to win a fair trial for Omar Khadr. The shameful abandonment of
unfairly jailed overseas Canadian citizens by the Harper Tories, and
the similar policy of turning Afghan detainees over to the corrupt and
brutal Karzai government, are scandals condemned by a wide range of
democratic organizations and the opposition parties in Parliament. But
this government simply prefers to lick the boots of its masters in
Washington.
Any country -
including the United States - which has been the target of terrorist
attacks has the legal right to bring charges against those responsible.
But no country has the right to trample on international law by
invading other countries and by concocting trumped-up murder charges
against children. The continued renewal of charges against Omar Khadr
shows that he cannot expect to receive a fair trial from the U.S.
military.
The CEC of
the Communist Party of Canada joins with Omar Khadr's lawyers, and with
labour, democratic and human right organizations to demand the dropping
of all charges, his immediate repatriation to Canada, and the closure
of the Guantanamo detention centre, illegally operated by the US on
Cuban territory. We call for an independent Canadian foreign policy of
peace and disarmament, beginning immediately by withdrawing Canadian
troops from Afghanistan.