What should have happened is that Omar should have been treated the same way as other children detained by the United States in Afghanistan were treated. He either should have been held in Afghanistan--and I believe that given his background it would have been difficult to do--repatriated somehow within the context of Afghanistan, or brought to Guantánamo as other children were, kept in Camp Iguana, afforded access to educational and other rehabilitative services, and then the U.S. government should have made efforts to repatriate him to Canada.
Again, at the outset of my remarks, I expressed my condemnation of Maha and Zaynab Khadr and the remarks they've made. I think based on their remarks, it would be appropriate for the U.S. government not to want to repatriate him in such a way that he would fall in line with them and other influences in his immediate family, yet there are other members of the Khadr family, who have been known for years, to whom Omar could have been repatriated successfully. Then certainly, as with other detainees, the U.S. government could have asked his home government if there were charges that could have been brought in Canada and he could receive process here.
So there were many options other than the one that was followed, which was to treat him as an adult and eventually seek to try him as an adult for a crime he probably didn't commit.