GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba | American military officers were flying to Guantanamo Bay from bases around the world Sunday to serve as jurors for war-crimes suspects as the offshore tribunal system gears up for one of its busiest weeks under President Obama.
The Pentagon is holding military commissions sessions this week for two detainees: a young Canadian going on trial for the slaying of a U.S. soldier in Afghanistan, and an aide to Osama bin Laden who is to be sentenced after pleading guilty in a deal with prosecutors.
The tribunal system that ground to a halt after Mr. Obama took office is coming alive with lawyers, human rights observers and more than 30 journalists who are at the U.S. Navy base in southeastern Cuba to attend Monday’s proceedings in two courtrooms.
Mr. Obama has introduced some changes designed to extend more legal protections to detainees, but the tribunals’ long-term future remains cloudy as the president struggles to fulfill a pledge to close the prison altogether.
The trial for Omar Khadr, the Toronto-born son of a reputed al Qaeda financier, is expected to begin Tuesday following pretrial hearings.
It will be the first trial under Mr. Obama and only the third at Guantanamo, where the system that President George W. Bush established for prosecuting terrorism suspects following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks has faced repeated legal setbacks and challenges.
Mr. Khadr is accused of lobbing a grenade that killed Army Sgt. 1st Class Christopher Speer of Albuquerque, N.M., during a 2002 firefight in Afghanistan. He faces a maximum life sentence if convicted of charges including murder, conspiracy and spying.
His attorneys deny he threw the grenade and argue that Mr. Khadr, the last Westerner at Guantanamo, deserves leniency because he was only 15 when he was captured. They contend the prosecutors’ case rests on confessions extracted following abuse, including sleep deprivation and threats of rape.
Mr. Khadr wrote in a May letter to one of his Canadian attorneys, Dennis Edney, that he was resigned to a harsh sentence from a system that he sees as unfair.
“It might work if the world sees the U.S. sentencing a child to life in prison, it might show the world how unfair and sham this process is,” Mr. Khadr said.
The U.S. Supreme Court last week rejected a last-ditch request to halt the trial on grounds that the system is unconstitutional.
In the other case, a military panel will begin deliberations as early as Monday on a sentence for Ibrahim Ahmed Mahmoud al Qosi, a Sudanese detainee who pleaded guilty last month to one count each of conspiracy and providing material support for terrorism.
Al Qosi was accused of acting as accountant, paymaster, supply chief and cook for al Qaeda during the 1990s, when the terrorism network was centered in Sudan and Afghanistan. He is said to have worked later as a bodyguard for Osama bin Laden.
The 50-year-old from Sudan faced a potential life sentence if convicted at trial. Terms of the plea deal, including any limits on his sentence, have not been disclosed.
Both detainees have been held at Guantanamo since 2002.
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