Waterloo Region Record

Omar Khadr wants unfettered access to sister, other bail changes

- Colin Perkel

Former Guantanamo Bay detainee Omar Khadr returns to court this week to ask that his bail conditions be eased, including allowing him unfettered contact with his controvers­ial older sister, more freedom to move around Canada, and unrestrict­ed internet access.

In support of his request, Khadr notes the conditions originally imposed two years ago were necessary as a graduated integratio­n plan following his 13 years in American and Canadian custody. No issues have arisen since his release and the various restrictio­ns have been revised several times — most recently in May last year, he says.

Currently, Khadr, 30, can only have contact with his sister Zaynab if one of his lawyers or bail supervisor is present. The condition is no longer necessary, he says.

“I am now an adult and I think independen­tly,” he says in an affidavit. “Even if the members of my family were to wish to influence my religious or other views, they would not be able to control or influence me in any negative manner.”

Zaynab Khadr, 37, who recently had a fourth child in Egypt, according to court filings obtained by The Canadian Press, was detained in Turkey a year ago for an expired visa. She and her fourth husband subsequent­ly moved to Malaysia but are now said to be living in Sudan and planning to visit Canada.

“I would like to be able to spend time with her and the rest of our family when she is here,” Omar Khadr states. “As far as I am aware, Zaynab is not involved in any criminal activities and is frequently in contact with the Canadian embassy in order to ensure that her paperwork is up to date.”

Zaynab Khadr, who was born in Ottawa, was at one point unable to get a Canadian passport after frequently reporting hers lost. She was also subject to an RCMP investigat­ion in 2005 but faced no charges.

Her third husband, Canadian Joshua Boyle, is reportedly still a Taliban hostage along with his American wife and children in Afghanista­n. In 2008, she went on a hunger strike on Parliament Hill to draw attention to her brother’s plight as an American captive in Guantanamo Bay.

Several years ago, she and her mother infuriated many Canadians by expressing pro-al-Qaida views.

Omar Khadr told The Canadian Press last month that he saw no point in decrying their views.

“I’m not excusing what they said. I’m not justifying what they said,” Khadr said.

“They were going through a hard time. They said things out of anger or frustratio­n.”

Khadr, who recently married, says a college in Red Deer, Alta., about a half hour from where he spent time in maximum security after his return from Guantanamo Bay, has accepted him into its nursing program.

He says he plans to leave his Edmonton apartment at the end of September and find new accommodat­ion.

 ?? COLIN PERKEL, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? “I am now an adult and I think independen­tly,” he says in an affidavit.
COLIN PERKEL, THE CANADIAN PRESS “I am now an adult and I think independen­tly,” he says in an affidavit.

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