SciFiFisher wrote:I don't pretend to understand the legal precedents they followed. He was a minor (age 15) when he was captured. He apparently threw the grenade that killed a U.S. service member. The military treated him as an adult enemy combatant. I am supposing that Canada's courts feel that he should have been treated as a minor with full civil rights accorded any other citizen. I am speculating that they felt he was under the influence of his father who was radicalized and took the boy to Afghanistan.
My opinion is colored by far too many years in the military. The moment he threw the grenade he forfeited the right to be treated as a minor, or a civilian non-combatant, and IMO he lost the right to claim civil rights protections he was trying so hard to repudiate.
Rommie wrote:SciFiFisher wrote:I don't pretend to understand the legal precedents they followed. He was a minor (age 15) when he was captured. He apparently threw the grenade that killed a U.S. service member. The military treated him as an adult enemy combatant. I am supposing that Canada's courts feel that he should have been treated as a minor with full civil rights accorded any other citizen. I am speculating that they felt he was under the influence of his father who was radicalized and took the boy to Afghanistan.
My opinion is colored by far too many years in the military. The moment he threw the grenade he forfeited the right to be treated as a minor, or a civilian non-combatant, and IMO he lost the right to claim civil rights protections he was trying so hard to repudiate.
Funny thing, international law actually only defines child soldiers as children under 15, and 15 and over you don't get classified as such. So Canada can do what they want, but international law agrees with your assessment.
geonuc wrote:Rommie wrote:SciFiFisher wrote:I don't pretend to understand the legal precedents they followed. He was a minor (age 15) when he was captured. He apparently threw the grenade that killed a U.S. service member. The military treated him as an adult enemy combatant. I am supposing that Canada's courts feel that he should have been treated as a minor with full civil rights accorded any other citizen. I am speculating that they felt he was under the influence of his father who was radicalized and took the boy to Afghanistan.
My opinion is colored by far too many years in the military. The moment he threw the grenade he forfeited the right to be treated as a minor, or a civilian non-combatant, and IMO he lost the right to claim civil rights protections he was trying so hard to repudiate.
Funny thing, international law actually only defines child soldiers as children under 15, and 15 and over you don't get classified as such. So Canada can do what they want, but international law agrees with your assessment.
I disagree. International law is slippery and often contradictory but I believe prevailing international law prohibits using children 15 or younger as a soldier but defines a child as someone younger than 18.
Parrothead wrote:The gov't line is, CSIS and Cdn officials who interviewed him at Gitmo, understood the treatment he was getting at Gitmo, but still shared info from their interviews with US officials at Gitmo. It was at this time that his constitutional rights were violated as canadian officials did not do their job properly. That is what the Supreme Court decisions are based on, not what happened before.
SciFiFisher wrote:Parrothead wrote:The gov't line is, CSIS and Cdn officials who interviewed him at Gitmo, understood the treatment he was getting at Gitmo, but still shared info from their interviews with US officials at Gitmo. It was at this time that his constitutional rights were violated as canadian officials did not do their job properly. That is what the Supreme Court decisions are based on, not what happened before.
ah yes. Essentially, they are saying that because he was being water boarded ( I assume this is part of the violation of his civil rights) and "tortured" at Gitmo the Canadian officials had a duty to protect him as a citizen of Canada. And because they shared the information they had, which was obtained while violating his civil rights, they failed in their duty. At least that is what I am assuming the courts were getting at.
Rommie wrote:Dunno why you had to put quotes around "tortured" when it's pretty clear it is.
Re: who's a child vs child soldier, sounds to me like there's a bit of a loophole there.
SciFiFisher wrote:In my humble opinion: You sound like a lawyer!
Does international law allow for treating someone under 18 as an enemy combatant? And trying them in military courts as such?
geonuc wrote:Third thing: as a lawyer, I definitely support the rule of law. And one of the rules is that if a person's rights are substantially violated, the case against them is irreparably damaged and they must be released no matter how heinous their alleged crime or how obvious their guilt. To do otherwise is to sanction government overstep when prosecuting anyone they don't like. You can imagine the slippery slope into fascist hell that might lead to. Better ten guilty people go free than one innocent be convicted. Mind you, I am in no way remotely convinced that this guy is guilty.
geonuc wrote:You do realize that when I write "Mind you, etc ..." that that is an aside and I'm not positing it as the 'real question'?
All that stuff you mention is in the category of evidence, substantiated and otherwise. None of it matters a whit if the guy's fundamental rights were substantially violated and the Canadian government has determined they were. Refer to what I wrote previously. That is my opinion.
The rule of law demands due process. Absent due process, you have a kangaroo court and I do not support anything that comes out of such proceedings.
vendic wrote:In war even babies get killed. As such they have the right to defend themselves. So if a baby can hold and fire an ak47 in self defence, they can be treated as combatants, legal or otherwise.
The problem in this world is that there aren't enough armed babies and this imho breaches the 2A.
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