It appears that Omar Khadr, a Canadian citizen now aged 17, is still in Guantanamo.
His Egyptian-born Canadian-citizen father, allegedly (and quite possibly) an al-Qaeda operative, and one younger brother, were believed to have been killed in October in a shoot-out with Pakistani forces. The father was then said to have escaped, but has now been confirmed dead:
http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2004/01/24/khadr040124and the son, aged 14, is apparently in custody in Pakistan:
http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2004/01/23/khadr040123His older brother was released from Guantanamo last year. The US authorities did not inform Canadian authorities he was being released -- but told him that Canada didn't want him, despite Canada's ongoing diplomatic efforts to secure the brothers' release. They shipped him to Afghanistan with no identity documents. He went to Pakistan and failed to convince Cdn embassy staff he was Canadian (apparently turned away from the embassy by a guard, i.e. local police), and went to Turkey, Iran and finally Bosnia before he was able to return to Canada.
If Omar, who is still in Guantanamo, is now 17, he would have been 15 when captured. The allegations against him (throwing a grenade) are fuzzy and contradictory and have never been clearly presented.
http://www.cbc.ca/storyview/CBC/2003/12/01/Khadrnewser_031201Khadr <Abdurahman, the one who was released> said it was commonplace for teenage boys in Afghanistan to attend such camps for weapons training. He said he has no ties to al-Qaeda but that his father was sympathetic to the Taliban cause.
The U.S. army arrested Khadr in 2001 in Afghanistan. He says he had just delivered some supplies to a school and was returning to his family's base in Kabul.
It was quite plain that the US government wanted the two Khadr brothers to obtain information about their father. That is an illegitimate reason for detaining anyone, let alone a juvenile in a prison camp. The father is now confirmed dead.
http://www.cbc.ca/storyview/CBC/2003/12/01/Khadrnewser_031201There are currently 660 prisoners living in cells at
Guantanamo Bay. They are subject to interrogations,
day and night and allowed two 20-minute exercise
breaks a week. There have been 32 have attempted
suicides at the camp.
Great place to grow up.
.