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Omar Khadr threatens his guards with vengeance

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On Monday, the judge hearing Omar Khadr's murder trial in Guantanamo Bay ruled that Khadr's taped confessions can be admitted at trial.

Canada's little terrorist is as good as done.

But what remains to be seen is whether the liberal media will save the myth of Omar Khadr -- the myth they have painstakingly built in collusion with Khadr's lawyers.

I predict that the Khadr in the two pictures below, photographed in front of an AK-47, and then assembling IEDs to use against NATO troops in Afghanistan, will be locked up for a very long time:

Khadr AK-47.JPGKhadr IEDs.JPG

 

 

 

 

 

 

But this Khadr, the mythical Khadr created by the CBC and the Toronto Star and the Globe and Mail, the Khadr from a junior high school photo provided to the media by his mother, will live on for a long time:

 
omar-khadr.jpg
If you want more Khadr footage as he really was, I encourage you to watch the 60 MInutes story on him, here.

 

What's going on here? Why is the media white-washing Khadr's evil? For an explanation, let me excerpt from a speech that the great Richard Fadden, the head of CSIS, gave last fall:

So why then, I ask, are those accused of terrorist offences often portrayed in media as quasi-folk heroes, despite the harsh statements of numerous judges? Why are they always photographed with their children, given tender-hearted profiles, and more or less taken at their word when they accuse CSIS or other government agencies of abusing them? It sometimes seems that to be accused of having terrorist connections in Canada has become a status symbol, a badge of courage in the struggle against the real enemy, which would appear to be, at least sometimes, the government. To some members of civil society, there is a certain romance to this. This loose partnership of single-issue NGOs, advocacy journalists and lawyers has succeeded, to a certain extent, in forging a positive public image for anyone accused of terrorist links or charges.

Bang on, just like his comments about Chinese spies in Canada.

No wonder the media-lawyer complex hates Fadden.

Today the Guantanamo court saw a video of Khadr threatening his guards with Allah's vengeance -- not quite how the media have portrayed him.

Here's how I put it in my latest column in the Sun newspapers:

Don't cry for Khadr

Canadian terror suspect Omar Khadr has it tough in Guantanamo Bay — just ask him, and the chorus of left-wing journalists and lawyers whose love for him makes Justin Bieber’s groupies look restrained.

Khadr says he has been tortured at Guantanamo Bay. But Monday, prosecutors in his murder trial showed a video of some of that “torture”: American guards trying to weigh Khadr when he first arrived there, as per Red Cross regulations. He wiggled and wriggled, first claiming he had to go to the potty, and then just crying.

But then Khadr regained his composure — and showed his true nature. “Sooner or later, God will take our revenge,” he said to the guards.

And what would Allah do to the guards, in vengeance for weighing him, as any prisoner in Canada is weighed? He will “torture you,” said Khadr, presumably meaning something more than just being weighed.

My, my. Invoking God and violence — sounds like a jihadi to me. But don’t let facts like that interfere with the liberal fiction of Khadr being a naive kid, just running with the wrong crowd, an innocent lamb.

Oh, the indignity of being weighed. The average Guantanamo detainee puts on 20 pounds during his stay at Guantanamo Bay, a place where more money is spent on Muslim halal food for prisoners than for the guards there. Fitting into his old pants is just torture!

It’s not just the special Muslim food; the Muslim call to prayer sounds five times a day at Guantanamo Bay, and arrows point to Mecca to show prisoners where to pray. Khadr knows better: He aims his prayers to Canada’s liberal press.

Khadr and his fellow inmates can work off all those large lunches if they like, playing basketball, volleyball and soccer. The Pentagon even provides high-top sneakers. There’s board games in the lounge, and plenty of TV time, including Arabic language TV and a library stocked with books in 13 languages. And as the Sun’s David Akin reported exclusively last month, Khadr has access to Nintendo, and regular computers, too.

And then there are the care packages sent to Khadr by Canada’s own Department of Foreign Affairs. To be clear: Canadian taxpayers send regular gifts to Khadr to make his stay even more comfortable.

It’s not the misogynist paradise of 72 virgins Khadr once said motivated him in his jihad. But there are more than a few similarities with the other resorts on Cuba.

Monday, the judge decided to hear about the reality of Khadr, not just the carefully constructed fiction his lawyers have offered up to an unquestioning media. He ruled tapes of Khadr’s confessions will be admitted at trial.

Question: Do you think the media will continue to use the junior high-school yearbook photo of Khadr, taken before he even went to Afghanistan and circulated to the press by Khadr’s own mother as an act of propaganda? 

Or do you think maybe — just maybe — we’ll see footage of the violent, threatening Khadr? 

Oh, and one last thing. Do you care that the very first Canadian killed in hostile action in Afghanistan was killed by an IED assembled by a terrorist who was under 18, just like Khadr was?

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This page contains a single entry by Ezra Levant published on August 9, 2010 11:27 PM.

Prosecute Greenpeace was the previous entry in this blog.

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