The Province

'Canada has set the bar' with Khadr payout: Former Gitmo detainee

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO — A British man compensate­d by the U.K. government for his torture and years of detention at Guantanamo Bay expressed dismay on Tuesday at the public and political furor in Canada over Ottawa’s settlement with Omar Khadr.

Speaking from his home in Birmingham in the U.K., Moazzam Begg said Canadians instead should be proud of the federal government for the payment and apology to Khadr for breaching his rights.

“The nation shouldn’t be upset about issuing an apology for something that’s right,” Begg told The Canadian Press.

Begg is one of 16 former Guantanamo detainees who settled lawsuits against the British government in 2010. The deal, while decried by some, aroused little of the anger seen in Canada over the Khadr settlement, announced last week, which sources said was worth $10.5 million.

For one thing, Begg said, Khadr’s payment was far in excess of anything the Britons received — reportedly a total of about $30 million.

Neverthele­ss, he said, Canada has led the way globally in how it has settled with Khadr.

“Canada has set the bar,” Begg said. “It isn’t about the amounts, though the amounts ... are far, far greater. It’s about the apology.”

Now 49, Begg was kidnapped in Pakistan, where he was living in early 2002, and turned over to American forces. They imprisoned him in Afghanista­n, where a horribly wounded 15-year-old Khadr was taken after U.S. soldiers captured him in July of that year.

Like Khadr, Begg, then 33, was also taken to Guantanamo Bay. He spent about three years there before being returned to the U.K., where he and the others embarked on their legal quest to expose British complicity in their abuse and seek compensati­on.

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? British Moazzam Begg leaves Belmarsh Prison in south London, after his release in 2014.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES British Moazzam Begg leaves Belmarsh Prison in south London, after his release in 2014.

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