alphazip said:
While Khadr's father and Khadr himself were in Afghanistan for various periods, the father was originally Egyptian and the mother Palestinian. It's likely that Omar Khadr is a dual Canadian-Egyptian citizen.
Thanks for the correction. Of course the key fact is whether or not Khadr has citizenship in another country. And even if he does, what impact would renounciation of the other citizenship have.
Overall, Khadr is probably a long, long way from losing Canadian citizenship, but his case may very well have been the impetus, or at least a big influence, in the government's push to include these highly controversial provisions in the
SCCA . . . for whatever reason, it is clear this government vehemently advocates lifetime punishment for Khadr despite his age and the influence of his father at the time of the events leading to the charges, injuries, and incarceration by the Americans.
SenoritaBella said:
Khadr was born in Toronto. Even if they apply it retroactively, would they strip citizenship off a native born citizen even if they have dual citizenship? There are former child soldiers in Canada that came as refugees. Wouldn't they need to go after them too? I think this is more to do with the upcoming election(shoring their base) and preventing a repeat of that butt whooping in Alberta.
The other issue with this provision is convictions in foreign countries. Some gov'ts are so corrupt it's not beyond them to make up charges. How does the canadian gov't hope to actually "know" with certainty that the person committed this crime?
The
Citizenship Act's revocation provisions for terrorism do indeed apply to those who are citizen by birth as much as naturalized citizens (it is just that more naturalized citizens tend to have dual citizenship). And of course this is a big part of the Galati challenge, that Parliament does not have the power to take away citizenship from a person who is a citizen at birth due to being born in Canada.
The child soldier aspect of this is indeed perplexing. It is my understanding that Khadr fit the criteria but neither Canada nor the U.S. have ever recognized Khadr as a child soldier entitled to the protections afforded in the international agreements regarding child soldiers. As I alluded in my previous post, if the government does proceed to revoke Khadr's citizenship pursuant to the new law, obviously a major issue will be his age at the time of the events . . . both relative to the child soldier considerations and more generally relative to the degree of culpability Canada applies to a person that young.
In terms of the validity and enforceability in Canada of a conviction in other countries, this is an issue that would be addressed (pursuant to the new law) in the course of the proceedings to revoke citizenship. The new procedures include a big difference in the procedure to revoke citizenship for fraud versus terrorism, the latter necessarily requiring a Federal Court review not just of the decision to proceed on the revocation but, as I understand it, a substantive determination of the grounds. Thus, the theory is that any flaw in the process leading to the conviction abroad would be a basis for the court to not revoke citizenship. Moreover, it must be shown that the conviction is for acts that would be a comparable offence under Canadian law, and regarding this I think this will be applied both to the elements of the offence abroad and to the acts themselves. That is, my understanding is that the process in Canada will require proof of both the procedural conviction itself and proof of the underlying facts of the offence.
The bigger danger, it appears to me, is the creeping expansion of what Canada defines to be acts of terrorism. Bill C-51 which is poised to be approved by the Senate in the next couple weeks, and likely to receive Royal Assent before the summer recess, already moves things significantly in that direction. The boundary between acts of civil disobedience in activism for political causes and what is terrorism is shrinking. For example, Green Peace and PETA activists, and others opposed to the various pipeline proposals, as well as First Nations activists (such as those who blockade VIA Rail at times), all have very real concerns about the direction this is trending.