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Abdullah Khadr arrested; faces extradition
CTV.ca News Staff
The eldest son of the notorious Khadr family has been arrested in Toronto.
Members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) took Abdullah Khadr, 23, into custody at approximately 7 p.m. Saturday. He was brought to Toronto's Metro West Detention facility.
His mother was also taken into custody after she became upset at the arrest. However, she isn't facing any charges.
"The RCMP was simply acting on the basis of a provisional warrant issued by the Department of Justice," spokesperson Cpl. Michele Paradis told CTV.ca.
A provisional warrant is issued based on accusations from another government. In Khadr's case, those accusations come from the U.S. government.
The RCMP declined to provide details of the arrest, except to say that it happened at a Toronto residence.
"I can't get into specifics," Paradis said. "We'd never give out that information."
According to a Saturday globeandmail.com report, Khadr faces extradition to the United States for allegedly planning to kill U.S. soldiers abroad.
The website of The Globe and Mail quoted Khadr's lawyer, Dennis Edney.
"The cops said they were acting on a provisional warrant from the United States," Edney said. "I can't say he sounded worried. I think he is in a state of shock."
Khadr returned to Canada from Pakistan in early December. He had been held, and he claims interrogated, in a Pakistani prison for 14 months.
When Abdullah returned to Canada, he denied having any ties to the al Qaeda Islamist terror organization. However, Khadr also said he feared the possibility that the United States would continue to seek custody of him.
According to Edney, the U.S. wants to charge Khadr with "possession and use of a destructive device in furtherance of a crime of violence that is conspiracy to murder a U.S. national outside of the U.S."
The Khadr family
Khadr is the eldest son of Ahmed Said Khadr. The Egyptian-born Canadian was killed during a gun battle with Pakistani forces in 2003. He was accused of being a fundraiser for al Qaeda.
Each of the four Khadr siblings have separately been jailed and accused of having links to international terrorism.
Abdul Khadr, 15, lives in Scarborough after being paralyzed in the gun battle with Pakistani security forces that left his father dead.
Omar Khadr, 19, is being held in the American detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. He has been charged with murder for the death of a U.S. medic in Afghanistan during a 2002 gun battle.
Abdurahman Khadr, 22, was captured in Afghanistan by the Northern Alliance and says he briefly worked for the CIA as an informant in Guantanamo Bay. He returned to Canada in December 2003 and is currently fighting a court case with the government to obtain a passport.
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20051217/abdullah_khadr_051217/20051217?hub=TopStories
CTV.ca News Staff
The eldest son of the notorious Khadr family has been arrested in Toronto.
Members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) took Abdullah Khadr, 23, into custody at approximately 7 p.m. Saturday. He was brought to Toronto's Metro West Detention facility.
His mother was also taken into custody after she became upset at the arrest. However, she isn't facing any charges.
"The RCMP was simply acting on the basis of a provisional warrant issued by the Department of Justice," spokesperson Cpl. Michele Paradis told CTV.ca.
A provisional warrant is issued based on accusations from another government. In Khadr's case, those accusations come from the U.S. government.
The RCMP declined to provide details of the arrest, except to say that it happened at a Toronto residence.
"I can't get into specifics," Paradis said. "We'd never give out that information."
According to a Saturday globeandmail.com report, Khadr faces extradition to the United States for allegedly planning to kill U.S. soldiers abroad.
The website of The Globe and Mail quoted Khadr's lawyer, Dennis Edney.
"The cops said they were acting on a provisional warrant from the United States," Edney said. "I can't say he sounded worried. I think he is in a state of shock."
Khadr returned to Canada from Pakistan in early December. He had been held, and he claims interrogated, in a Pakistani prison for 14 months.
When Abdullah returned to Canada, he denied having any ties to the al Qaeda Islamist terror organization. However, Khadr also said he feared the possibility that the United States would continue to seek custody of him.
According to Edney, the U.S. wants to charge Khadr with "possession and use of a destructive device in furtherance of a crime of violence that is conspiracy to murder a U.S. national outside of the U.S."
The Khadr family
Khadr is the eldest son of Ahmed Said Khadr. The Egyptian-born Canadian was killed during a gun battle with Pakistani forces in 2003. He was accused of being a fundraiser for al Qaeda.
Each of the four Khadr siblings have separately been jailed and accused of having links to international terrorism.
Abdul Khadr, 15, lives in Scarborough after being paralyzed in the gun battle with Pakistani security forces that left his father dead.
Omar Khadr, 19, is being held in the American detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. He has been charged with murder for the death of a U.S. medic in Afghanistan during a 2002 gun battle.
Abdurahman Khadr, 22, was captured in Afghanistan by the Northern Alliance and says he briefly worked for the CIA as an informant in Guantanamo Bay. He returned to Canada in December 2003 and is currently fighting a court case with the government to obtain a passport.
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20051217/abdullah_khadr_051217/20051217?hub=TopStories