Mr. Chair, thank you for inviting me to testify before the subcommittee today on the Omar Khadr case. I have an interest in his case for one very simple reason: Omar Khadr is a child soldier. When he was captured by the Americans and sent first to Bagram and then to Guantanamo, he should, as a child soldier, have been treated according to the international rules set out in the optional protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the involvement of children in armed conflicts. He should have been rehabilitated and demobilized from the outset, as stipulated by the optional protocol and the Paris Commitments.
I will speak to a number of points this afternoon. I have listened to or reviewed a good deal of the testimony to date. Today, I restate a constant that cannot be denied, either in logic or in international law, unless a purely political decision is made to do so. Despite the protestations of complete transparency made with great fanfare from the beginning of the government's mandate, we have to wonder on which legal arguments and under which convention Canada bases its continuing silence and inaction on the decision to keep Khadr in illegal detention.
My involvement with child soldiers in armed conflict did not just begin today. My previous experience has led me to be in contact, and work closely, with child soldiers involved in armed conflict in various parts of the world. As a result, I believe that I have acquired some useful expertise that qualifies me to investigate and speak out about the Omar Khadr case. In Rwanda, in 1993 and 1994, I noticed that child soldiers were involved with the paramilitary Interahamwe militias and the Rwandan Patriotic Front. From that moment, my desire to work to prevent them being recruited and deployed was born.
I would like to tell you about a personal experience. I was approaching a checkpoint manned by soldiers who were 14- to 16-year-old children. They were very agitated. When my vehicle stopped, I opened the door to get out. A boy of about 15, with an AK-47 assault rifle in his hands, aimed it virtually up my nose. Egged on by the others, he had his finger on the trigger. I am absolutely convinced that I am alive today because he saw the chocolate bar I had in my hand. He took his finger off the trigger and we were allowed to move on. We are dealing with a real threat used in the field by adults.
As deputy commander of the Canadian army, I took part, on my return, in seminars and peacekeeping doctrine meetings dealing with child soldiers in conflicts. From 2000 to 2005, after my medical discharge, I worked part-time as special advisor to the Minister of International Cooperation on children affected by armed conflict. I looked more deeply into the question of demobilizing, disarming, rehabilitating and reintegrating child soldiers, and into Canada's programs in that field. In January 2006, after the new government was elected, I was, for all intents and purposes, unceremoniously fired.
This position was offered to me in 2000 because Canada was then determined to take a leadership role in offering protection to war-affected children. This was following the first International Conference on War-Affected Children, in which 137 countries participated. It was held in Winnipeg in September 2000 and was led by Lloyd Axworthy and Maria Minna, Ministers of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation respectively.
By June 2001, Canada was launching its action plan on child protection, which committed $122 million over five years to help the world's most marginalized children, including child soldiers.
In late 2002 I was sent to Sierra Leone to look at what Canada could do in regard to funding not only the DDRR processes, which I've described to you as demobilization, disarmament, rehabilitation, and reintegration, but also the tribunal. One of the judges is the ex-Judge Advocate General of the Canadian Forces, Judge Pierre Boutet, who has been sitting there since that time.
We committed some funds and efforts towards sustaining the tribunal and the actions of demobilization, or DDRR. That investment brought home not only boys but also girls, who made up some 40% of child soldiers at the time. This was a significant investment with a positive result, and our commitment exists even today. We are retraining those ex-child soldiers, who have been rehabilitated and are now adults, for the professional army of Sierra Leone. My son is a captain, part of the Canadian and British team who are doing that at this time.
In 2004-05, I supervised research at the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School, and we published “Children In Conflict: Eradicating the Child Soldier Doctrine”. It was essentially about how to stop the use of children as a primary weapon of war. How are adults, then, prevented from using children as the primary instrument of war? I am doing research with Search for Common Ground—USA, UNICEF Canada, the Universities of Winnipeg and Victoria, the Pearson Peacekeeping Centre, and the Canadian Forces. Next year, this research will be used in the Congo in a one-year field trial.
As to the Khadr case, I was not aware of it until about a year ago, when the circumstances surrounding it were finally becoming open to all. Before that, I had erroneously assumed that Canada was working out a deal with the Pentagon. Like other countries, we were well aware of the breach in the Geneva conventions at Guantanamo Bay, as well as the secret prisons the U.S. had established around the world in flagrant violation of the same laws of armed conflict designed to protect, and to be applied by, our own troops in operations like Afghanistan.
In regard to the child soldier, Omar Khadr, the optional protocol to the convention on the rights of the child on the involvement of children in armed conflict, hereafter optional protocol, is the only binding international instrument that concerns child soldiers. The child soldier is commonly referred to as any person under 18 years of age who is compulsorily, forcibly, or voluntarily recruited or used in hostilities by any kind of armed forces or groups in any capacity. This means soldiers, cooks, porters, messengers, camp followers, and those accompanying such groups, including girls used as bush wives or sex slaves and forced into marriage. It does not, therefore, refer exclusively to a child who is carrying or has carried arms.
Article 4 of the optional protocol prohibits armed groups from recruiting or using children under the age of 18 in hostilities. That includes family members who actually recruit their children to provide what they perceive as protection. They are as guilty as those who are participants in the armed groups.
Canada ratified the optional protocol in July 2000. Today, more than 120 countries have ratified it, including the United States in January 2003. That was while Omar Khadr was detained in Guantanamo Bay. We're looking from both sides of our heads. We are obviously bicéphales in that perspective.
In addition to the optional protocol, Canada ratified the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. Under the Rome Statute, recruitment and use of children under the age of 15 in hostilities, whether international or non-international, is a war crime.
I met the chief prosecutor and the president of the court, and will be going over to discuss child soldier implications in conflicts. They have, themselves, now, an adult who has been recruiting children in the Congo and is in front of the court.
In February 2007, while Omar Khadr remained in detention, Canada, along with 57 other states, including the United States, agreed to the Paris commitments to protect children from unlawful recruitment or use by armed forces or armed groups. The 2007 Paris commitments further clarified the definition of a child soldier, worded as “a child associated with an armed force or armed group”.
The document defines them as
any person below 18 years of age who is or who has been recruited or used by an armed force or armed group in any capacity, including but not limited to children, boys and girls, used as fighters, cooks, porters, messengers, spies or for sexual purposes. It does not only refer to a child who is taking or who has taken direct part in hostilities.
According to these international standards regarding child soldiers, it is quite clear, unless you don't want to see it, that Omar Khadr was, at the time of his capture by the U.S., at 15 years of age, a child soldier, both according to the optional protocol and the Rome Statute.
Omar Khadr was coerced, indoctrinated, and used by his father to take part in the military activities of an armed group, namely al-Qaeda. Khadr is exactly the victim this optional protocol is trying to save and why some of us are working at eradicating the use of children as weapons of war, because even the parents are using them, and that does not make the children more guilty. They are still child soldiers.
The optional protocol contains no specific provisions on the extent of criminal responsibility for crimes committed during conflicts that will warrant prosecution of child soldiers, and introducing the term “terrorist” has absolutely no legal standing whatsoever.
Articles 6 and 7 of the optional protocol rather insist on cooperation and assistance for the physical and psychological rehabilitation and social reintegration of child soldiers. It is in the spirit of international consensus that Canada and the U.S. have spent millions upon millions in demobilizing and reintegrating programs to assist former child soldiers begin a new life in the aftermath of conflict in Africa, Latin America, and Asia.
Article 10 of the Paris principles further states that “all children under 18 years of age who are detained on criminal charges” should be “treated in accordance with relevant international law and standards”.
Article 11 then qualifies the principles that go on, as one step further, when specifying that child soldiers should be “considered primarily as victims of violations against international law and not only as alleged perpetrators”.
It states that they should be treated in accordance with international standards of juvenile justice, such as the framework of the restorative justice and social rehabilitation.
Because of time, I'm going to cut this short, if I may.
In other words, child soldiers should be seen as victims and should be rehabilitated and treated in accordance with a juvenile justice system, and so should Omar Khadr. Omar Khadr is a victim, not a terrorist or a perpetrator. Why has he not benefited from rehabilitation and treatment, such as all the other child soldiers who have been demobilized and reintegrated into Afghanistan? Our forces have demobilized over 7,000 of them in Afghanistan. None have been prosecuted. In fact they are being rehabilitated, reintegrated, and potentially, at the age of 18, recruited into the same forces we want to use to replace us to be able to bring stability to that nation.
It is because he allegedly killed an American soldier. Is that a criterion? That would not be defendable by even a very solid ally in the war on terrorism such as us. There must be some political reason. There are surely no legal or war operational reasons that keep Omar Khadr in that jail. What is the political reason? What makes him different from the others? What criteria did the government use and is it receiving from its functionaries in regard to this case?
I have raised questions on this five times in the Senate, to which I continue to get the same response, that Omar Khadr is following a judicial system and that he is being treated humanely.
Ladies and gentlemen, the President of the United States wants to close the place down. Everybody else has pulled theirs out. The current potential candidates for the presidency all want to close down Guantanamo Bay. The judicial system in the United States and Canada has spoken eloquently on the illegality of Guantanamo Bay, on the manoeuvring of the Geneva conventions, of torture and coercion to get information and testimony. The thing is flawed. It is illegal. And we're letting it happen.
Ladies and gentlemen, in conclusion, we will be the first country in the world to actually have one of our own, as a child soldier, prosecuted in a foreign land, on an illegal charge, by an illegal court, and in the process, we let it happen.
Thank you very much.