The Standard (St. Catharines)

Livid over Khadr decision

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Regarding the article “Khadr to get $10.5-million apology” (Wednesday, July 7)

If I were an aboriginal Canadian who had survived the horrors of the residentia­l schools programs that actually were the responsibi­lity of the Canadian government, and who had received as compensati­on a few paltry thousand dollars, I would be outraged by the settlement that Omar Khadr is going to receive as described by your article.

As it happens, I am not aboriginal, but am still livid over this decision.

Khadr, along with his father and the rest of his family, is the author of his own misfortune. Canada did not send him to fight in the Middle East. Canada did not capture him and subject him to unreasonab­le detention and torture. Canada did not fill his head with the vitriolic philosophy of al-Qaida. This whole situation was purely an interactio­n between Khadr, his father and the United States military. Canada is not complicit in any way.

Much ado had been made of the interrogat­ion of Khadr by Canadian intelligen­ce officers. It is hard to imagine that a couple of milquetoas­t CSIS officers would be able to elicit any intelligen­ce from Khadr that the hard-bitten American interrogat­ors hadn’t already collected.

Should Canada have applied to the United States for early release back to Canada? Perhaps, but there is certainly no guarantee that the Americans would have complied.

I expect that this decision comes as a slap in the face to our service men and women who served on the right side in Afghanista­n.

Ed Smith Vineland

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