Talk:You Don't Like the Truth
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[edit]Additional references:
- Rachel Chu (2011-09-28). "Injustice and nine years". Cinespect. Retrieved 2011-10-07.
At best, Omar's is a case of a very young terrorist-in-training who did not receive adequate due process of law. (The Canadian Supreme Court found last year that Omar Khadr's constitutional rights were violated by the interrogation at Gitmo, but declined to petition for his repatriation to Canada.) At worst, Omar was a child who was placed by his father in the wrong place at the wrong time. As a result, he was captured, repeatedly tortured both physically and psychologically, denied proper medical care and held in a "legal black hole" for nine years. What must lie on the other side of the scale to justify the risk of such a catastrophic injustice?
mirror - Colin Kennedy (2011-10-06). "Four Days Inside Guantánamo is enlightening but lacks balance". Metro (UK). Retrieved 2011-10-07.
Filmed in 2003, interviews with 16-year-old Canadian terror suspect Omar Khadr are static, fuzzy, repetitive and redacted of vital information, but they form one of the clearest pictures to date of the collateral damage caused by the war on terror.
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