Amnesty International Says U.S. Government Must Address Khadr’s Rights Violations After Plea Agreement

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(Washington, D.C.)  Amnesty International today called on the U.S. authorities to address any human rights violations committed against Canadian national Omar Khadr, in spite of him pleading guilty to the charges against him at a military commission at the U.S.-controlled Guantánamo Bay detention center.

This morning, Khadr pleaded guilty to five "war crime" charges, including a murder charge for allegedly throwing a grenade that fatally wounded a U.S. soldier. He had been held in U.S. military custody for eight and half years, after being detained in late July 2002 in Afghanistan when he was aged 15.

“While military trial proceedings may be coming to an end in Khadr’s case, the obligation on the U.S. authorities to address serious concerns about human rights violations suffered by him does not end” said Rob Freer, Amnesty International’s USA researcher. “The U.S. authorities have ignored their international duties in the treatment of children, which was the case when Khadr was arrested eight years ago.”


The guilty plea is the result of an agreement between Khadr, his lawyers and the U.S. authorities. According to the Pentagon, with the military judge having accepted the plea after questioning Khadr in court today, the sentencing hearing will begin tomorrow.  While the full details of the plea bargain have not yet been made public, the deal reportedly provides for an eight-year prison term with the United States supporting Khadr’s transfer to Canada to serve the final seven years of the sentence there.

The United States has also failed to recognize that his case fell under the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the involvement of children in armed conflict. Khadr has repeatedly alleged that he was subjected to interrogation techniques and detention conditions that amounted to torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment.

“The United States must abandon military commissions and bring any Guantánamo detainee it intends to prosecute to trial in ordinary civilian federal court, in accordance with international fair trial standards,” said Freer.  “Any detainee it does not intend to prosecute should be immediately released. The fact that the military commission system falls short of international fair trial standards is not changed by a plea deal being reached in Khadr’s case.”

Earlier this month, the United Nation body which monitors implementation of the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child called on the United States and Somalia to ratify this treaty. These two countries are the only ones not to have done so.

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For more information contact the AIUSA press office at or go to www.amnestyusa.org.

 

Contact: AIUSA media relations office, 202-509-8194

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