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Abu Hamza to be extradited to US

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-19842941

Five suspected terrorists including Abu Hamza al-Masri can be extradited to the US, ending a long legal battle, UK High Court judges have decided.

The court ruled Hamza, Babar Ahmad, Syed Talha Ahsan, Adel Abdul Bary and Khaled al-Fawwaz did not show "new and compelling" reasons to stay in the UK.

Their appeal came after the European Court of Human Rights backed successive UK courts in ruling for extradition.

The men have left Long Lartin prison in a police convoy.

Three police 4x4s, two armoured vans and a blacked-out police people carrier arrived at the Worcestershire jail at 18:15 BST.

A Home Office spokesman welcomed the decision and said it was "working to extradite these men as quickly as possible".

The BBC understands two US civilian jets - one of which is registered to the US Department of Justice - are on the tarmac at an air base in eastern England.

Judges Sir John Thomas and Mr Justice Ousley said in their ruling that there was an "overwhelming public interest in the functioning of the extradition system" and that there was "no appeal from our decision".

Of the long legal battle to send the men - whose extradition requests were submitted between 1998 and 2006 - to the US, Sir John told the court: "It is unacceptable that extradition proceedings should take more than a relatively short time, to be measured in months not years.

"It is not just to anyone that proceedings such as these should last between 14 and eight years."

There was no doubt each man had, over the years, "either taken or had the opportunity to take every conceivable point to prevent his extradition to the United States", he added.

The comments echoed those of James Eadie QC - representing the home secretary - who, during this week's hearing, argued the men's applications amounted to an abuse of process.

The judges' written ruling, read out in court, concluded that "each of the claimants' applications for permission to apply for judicial review or for a re-opening of the statutory appeals be dismissed".

The judges rejected a plea by Abu Hamza to delay his extradition so he could undergo an MRI brain scan which, his lawyers said, could show he was unfit to plead because of degenerative problems.

"The sooner he is put on trial the better," they said.

The 54-year-old, a former imam at Finsbury Park mosque, north London, was suffering from chronic sleep deprivation and depression as a result of eight years in prison, his lawyers added.

But during the hearing, Sir John observed there were "excellent medical facilities in the United States".

The BBC's Dominic Casciani, at the High Court, said the British government had got the result it had wanted to see for years on Abu Hamza, who the US first attempted to extradite in 2004.

His extradition was halted when the UK decided to try him on allegations relating to his sermons. He was convicted in 2006.

The judges also rejected appeals from Mr al-Fawwaz and Mr Bary, who are accused of being aides to Osama Bin Laden in London.

The US alleges they promoted violent jihad against the West and were involved in the 1998 US embassy bombings in East Africa, which killed more than 200 people.

The battle to stay in the UK is also over for Babar Ahmad and Talha Ahsan, who are accused of running pro-jihad website Azzam.com - which the US says was hosted there - and of helping terrorists.

In a statement prepared in prison before the verdict, Mr Ahmad said that, "By exposing the fallacy of the UK's extradition arrangements with the US, I leave with my head held high having won the moral victory."

Mr Ahmad's father, Ashfaq, said outside court he was appalled the British legal system had let him down "in a manner more befitting of a Third World country than one of the world's oldest democracies".

"We will never abandon our struggle for justice for Babar and the truth will eventually emerge of what will be forever remembered as a shameful chapter in the history of Britain," he added.

And Emma Norton, legal officer for human rights group Liberty, said that, as Mr Ahmad's alleged offences took place in the UK, "It beggars belief that he won't be tried here."

"Isn't British justice - so admired around the world - capable of dealing with crimes committed in the UK by its own citizens?" she added.

In a statement released by its embassy in London, the US said it was "pleased" the men were being extradited after "a lengthy process of litigation".

"The law enforcement relationship between the United States and United Kingdom is predicated on trust, respect, and the common goals of protecting our nations and eliminating safe havens for criminals, including terrorists," it added.

Lord Reid, who was home secretary in 2006 and 2007, meanwhile, said that like "the vast majority of people in this country" he had a sense of satisfaction "that justice, or at least this sense of the judicial process" had been complete.

He told BBC News "The propriety, the attention, the compassion, the legal approach that has been taken on this by the British stands in marked contrast to what was meted out to the victims of some of these alleged crimes."

But he urged the home secretary to look at the length of time the legal process took "because there is no doubt there has been a degree of frustration".

BBC legal correspondent Clive Coleman said the judges had thrown down the gauntlet for Parliament to look at judicial reviews - which can be used to re-open issues that have already been decided.

One of the challenges was to stop suspects from storing up last-minute legal challenges that frustrated the courts and bewildered the public, he added.


Added: Oct-5-2012 Occurred On: Oct-5-2012
By: Zurm
In:
World News
Tags: Abu Hamza, extradited, US
Location: United Kingdom (UK/GB) (load item map)
Marked as: approved
Views: 1299 | Comments: 44 | Votes: 0 | Favorites: 0 | Shared: 1 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 2
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  • "By exposing the fallacy of the UK's extradition arrangements with the US, I leave with my head held high having won the moral victory."

    Fuck off you murdering scum, our extradition arrangements with the USA are fairer than anything you'll find in any Arab court that you'd have imposed in the UK.

    Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

    (7)

  • love the key hooks.. LOL!!

    Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

    (5)

  • Allah...Allah...Allah...Allah've one of those key hangers,please....

    ps can't they deport his fucking bastard family while they're at it ? Would save the ol' country a few shekels a year...

    Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

    (5)

  • Enjoy your lifelong vacation alone in a concrete cell.

    Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

    (4)

  • "Mr Ahmad's father, Ashfaq..." Bwuahahahahahahaha I just can't get over how badly he must have been bullied, probably accounts for the filthy spawn he threw up his wife!

    Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

    (4)

  • At fucking last, boot that hook handed scumbag out along with his vile spawn and wife.

    Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

    (3)

    • @skerne Sadly she'll probably stay along with his kids, five of whom have already done porridge for various crimes.

      He's actually in transit to the USA right now via an RAF base. Fucking brilliant!

      Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

      (3)

    • @skerne P.S. you can thank the European Court on Human Rights for blocking his extradition to the USA 2 years ago. They went from torture as a prohibition to to SUPERMAX prisons as prohibiting to objecting to a sentence of life without parole.

      Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

      (1)

  • Yes!

    Cheerio, cheerio, cheerio!
    Cheerio, cheerio, cheeriOOooo!
    Cheerio, cheerio, cheeriooo!
    Cheerio-oh, cheerio! - <and repeat>

    Love the keyhooks :-)

    This shit-stirring inciting fuck is finally going to get his comeuppance.

    Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

    (3)

    • @dorbie

      I don't know what "correctional" facilities are like in the UK, but he's not going to enjoy his stay if he ends up in a federal prison in the USA.

      Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

      (2)

    • @pachaKamaq He is not allowed to be sentenced to a SUPERMAX prison thanks to the ECHR rullings. I'm pretty sure he won't get club fed though. He'll wind up in some random Federal Prison, hopefully somewhere cold.

      Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @dorbie In general population with nobody looking. Heheheh.

      Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @dorbie

      From what I've heard, federal prisons are cush. Drop him over the mid-Atlantic. That would be fogiving as my Lord commands.

      Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @pachaKamaq I've heard about "Club Fed" too but I think there are a large range of different prisons.

      Posted Oct-7-2012 By 

      (0)

  • HES LEAVING ON A JET PLANE. u know the rest

    Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

    (2)

  • Obama's Tolerance Czar is on his way.

    Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

    (2)

  • Comment of user 'Thrush' has been deleted by author!
  • wrap him in cling-film and send him by sea-post.

    Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

    (2)

    • @2old4this He's already in the hands of US Marshals at RAF Mildenhall, Suffolk. He may even be in the air right now. Beautifully done. No more appeals for this scumbag, it's taken over two years to get him over to the USA thanks to the ECHR. This was his last ditch appeal and he lost.

      Adios scumbag.

      Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

      (2)

    • @dorbie Thank you, sirs. We'll take it from here ;)

      Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

      (3)

    • @kajidono Yes :-), he's just done a long stretch in the UK for his crimes. A nice warm-up for spending the rest of his natural in an American hole.

      Posted Oct-7-2012 By 

      (1)

  • Finally, a headline fulfilled. He should have left while he had the chance:

    http://sunheadlines.blogspot.com/2008/12/classics-sling-your-hook.html

    Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

    (2)

  • Finally that fucking cunt has gone, just a terrible shame it was at the HUGE expense of the tax payers, the money involved here could have kept a small country going.

    What hurts more is that when they arrested him and searched his house he had hundreds of thousands of pounds in CASH there that he claimed was donations for the mosque and I believe they were not taken as proceeds of crime.

    This is also the same man who has purchased houses for his wives and family IN CASH under their names, the More..

    Posted Oct-6-2012 By 

    (2)

  • Pathetic really - that the system was abused so openly, brazenly, by a person who is the antithesis of what constitutes a fair definition of a loyal British subject.

    Frankly, it is an embarrassment that due process took so long. As the Justice said, it should be a matter of weeks not months or years to boot people of this nature out of your country.

    Five simple words cover a broad sentiment of immediate action: "In defense of the Realm".

    The laws ought to reflect the cultural expe More..

    Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

    (2)

  • hard time coming your way hook handed muslim scum bag

    Posted Oct-5-2012 By 

    (1)