Thank you. My name is Andrew Harrington, and I'll be dealing with the 1936 Canadian Foreign Enlistment Act this afternoon.
Our conclusion, based on analyzing this act, is that Omar, if the alleged facts against him are proven to be true, may be prosecuted for accepting an engagement with al-Qaeda under the Foreign Enlistment Act. This act was passed in 1936 in direct response to Canadians filtering over to the Spanish Civil War, and it was intended to prevent this from happening. It is the formal reception of British imperial law into Canadian law, and as such, a lot of the definitions in this act are different from those that exist in Canadian and international law at present, as discussed by my colleagues.
With specific regard to this act, section 3 is the most relevant. This section has five elements in order to secure a prosecution: the person must be a Canadian national; they must accept an engagement voluntarily; they must be engaged with armed forces; those armed forces must also belong to a foreign state; and that foreign state must be at war with a friendly foreign state. The application is extra-territorial, and if indicted, a person may be fined $2,000 and imprisoned for two years less a day, or a combination thereof. This act has actually never been used in Canadian law to this date.
In terms of applying these elements to Omar Khadr, Omar Khadr is clearly a Canadian citizen and therefore a Canadian national under the 1936 definition, so he is subject to this act. In terms of voluntarily accepting an engagement with al-Qaeda, voluntary means an action undertaken without coercion, which is actions taken without any compulsion, such as unlawful physical force or the threat of unlawful physical force to compel an action against someone's will or judgment. While there was undoubtedly pressure on Omar to join al-Qaeda, if the allegations are true, this is almost irrelevant because there is no evidence of physical threat to his person for not having joined or for having refused to join.
With regard to his engagement, an engagement is defined as a contract or agreement involving mutual promises or simply an appointment. If the U.S. allegations against Omar are accurate, he was clearly engaged by al-Qaeda. He completed training in the use of various weapons and explosives. He conducted surveillance, he actually planted those explosives, and he spied on behalf of al-Qaeda. This was clearly an engagement.
With regard to the third factor, al-Qaeda did constitute an armed force at the time and was part of the Taliban armed forces, as defined by the Foreign Enlistment Act, at the time when Omar was engaged. Armed forces in the act are defined as army, naval, land or air forces, combatant or non-combatant. On the facts at the time Omar was engaged, the Taliban consisted of roughly 45,000 infantry troops. They had 100 tanks on the ground and approximately 250 armoured fighting vehicles. It's difficult to understand how this could not be considered an armed force under the definitions in the act.
With regard to al-Qaeda, one of the reasons Afghanistan was invaded in the first place was because al-Qaeda was sufficiently integrated into the Taliban forces so as to basically be indistinguishable. In essence, the Taliban was the equivalent of an international brigade, such as those Canadians who were prohibited from joining during the Spanish Civil War.
At the time Omar was engaged with the Taliban, the Taliban met the Foreign Enlistment Act's definition of a foreign state. As I said, this definition is different from those my colleagues are using. Foreign state is actually defined in the act as any “people, or any person or persons exercising or assuming to exercise the powers of government in or over any foreign country, colony, province or part of any province or people”. It's meant to catch people who are presuming to assume governmental functions of an area, and it's specifically directed towards unlawful or unrecognized belligerence. This clearly applies to the Taliban in the case at hand, as they actually, up to this date, presume to assume governmental functions over various portions of Afghanistan.
In the final section of this act...the Taliban was at war with the United States, which is clearly a friendly state. The definition of war used here was a colloquial one at the time, which has since shifted to the interpretation of a much broader concept of armed conflict, and there's literally no question that there was an armed conflict in Afghanistan at the time this happened.
If the facts alleged are true, the conclusion out of this is that Omar may be prosecuted under the Foreign Enlistment Act for a violation of section 3.
I will now pass it on to Ms. Archibald to continue this afternoon.