Posts Tagged ‘Omar Khadr’

Join me this Saturday on Prism TV for a panel discussion on Omar Khadr

Monday, November 8th, 2010

I’ll be hosting the fifth broadcast of Rights and Security on Prism TV this Saturday November 13 at 11:00am EST. This special edition will be broadcast from the headquarters of Amnesty International Canada. I’ll be joined by Amnesty International’s Alex Neve, Amir Attaran from the University of Ottawa’s law school, the Globe and Mail’s Paul Koring, and Dennis Edney, Khadr’s Canadian lawyer, as well as a focus group of 15 expert human rights activists, lawyers, academics, politicians and former public service workers. You can read more about it here, and watch live here.

Khadr wasn’t so sure it was Maher Arar after all…

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009

It seems that FBI interrogator Robert Fuller’s testimony is a little different today. Yesterday he testified that Omar Khadr, while being interrogated at Bagram in Afghanistan, identified Maher Arar by name, and said he’d seen him in al Qaeda-run “safe-house” near Kabul.

Today, Fuller’s story appears to have changed.

According to Canwest news reports, interrogation notes show that Omar Khadr only told interrogators that the man in the picture they showed him “looked familiar.”

It gets worse. It also turns out that “in time” Khadr told interrogators that he “stated he felt he had seen” the person in the picture in Afghanistan in 2001, a time when Maher Arar’s life in North America is well-documented.

FBI takes another gratuitous, desperate swipe at Maher Arar’s reputation

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009

In what appears to have been a last ditch effort to make some use of Guantanamo trials that will almost certainly be shut down within the first few days of an Obama presidency, and in a seemingly desperate attempt to detract attention from, or somehow justify, the shameful legacy of lawlessness and torture that has marred the credibility of American and Canadian law enforcement and security agencies since 9/11, the FBI has taken another gratuitous swipe at Maher Arar’s reputation.

Today, at a pre-trial hearing for Omar Khadr in Guantanamo Bay, FBI interrogator Robert Fuller testified that in October 2002, a then just turned 16 year-old Omar Khadr, while incarcerated at the American’s military base in Bagram, Afghanistan, said that he had seen Arar in Afghanistan, an allegation Arar has long denied.

Never mind that nothing that anyone has said to interrogators at the Bagram air force base, where so much prisoner abuse, torture and even prisoner deaths have been documented, can be considered remotely reliable. As Michelle Shephard, Toronto Star journalist and author of Guantanamo’s Child: The Untold Story of Omar Khadr notes, some of Bagram’s interrogators were later convicted of killing an innocent Afghan citizen during an interrogation there.

And never mind that Khadr has said that he repeatedly lied to interrogators in order to improve his detention conditions, especially when interrogators kept saying that if only he cooperated, he’d be sent home.

The fact is that Maher Arar has been exonerated.

First, by an exhaustive four-year long public inquiry in Canada which concluded that Canadian agencies had no evidence of wrongdoing by Arar, and that the U.S. “very likely” based their decision to send him to torture in Syria on erroneous Canadian information.

Then, by the Harper government itself, which, before settling Arar’s law suit, sent then-public safety minister Stockwell Day to the U.S to see the American file on Arar.

Day returned to say there was nothing there that would justify keeping Arar on a watchlist, and within weeks Prime Minister Harper was on live television issuing an official, and long-overdue, public apology on behalf of the government to Arar and his family.

Not much later, Arar and his family were deservedly financially compensated for Canada’s role in what happened to him.

Quite simply, the information put forth today, coming from an agency under fire for its legacy of complicity in torture, cannot be trusted.

Maher Arar and his family have endured enough.

It is the record of the FBI, CIA, RCMP, CSIS and other security agencies that must come under scrutiny now — not Maher Arar’s.