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Abu Hamza makes high court bid to avoid extradition
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Abu Hamza makes high court bid to avoid extradition
High court to consider requests from Abu Hamza and other terrorist suspects against their extradition to the US
Owen Bowcott, legal affairs correspondent
Lawyers for terrorist suspects facing imminent extradition to the US, including the radical Islamist cleric Abu Hamza, are due in court to make last-ditch appeals against their removal.
Applications for injunctions halting the deportation of Abu Hamza, Babar Ahmed, Khaled al-Fawwaz and Adel Abdul Bary are listed for the Royal Courts of Justice. The court list does not mention the fifth suspect, Syed Talha Ahsan.
Lawyers for Abu Hamza are applying for an injunction on medical grounds.
The men, who are all in custody, are not expected to appear in court. The applications follow an announcement by the director of public prosecutions (DPP), Keir Starmer QC, that he will not support a private criminal action against two of the men, Ahmad and Ahsan, thereby clearing away another legal obstacle to their deportation.
Hamza, who was jailed for seven years for soliciting to murder and inciting racial hatred, has been fighting extradition since 2004. Ahmad, a computer expert, has been held in a UK prison without trial for eight years after being accused of raising funds for terrorism through a website. Fawwaz and Bary are accused of being aides to Osama bin Laden. The claims will be heard before Sir John Thomas, president of the Queen's Bench Division, and Mr Justice Ouseley.
Last week, the European court of human rights in Strasbourg rejected further appeals to its upper chamber, agreeing with an earlier ruling that the human rights of the five terrorist suspects would not be violated by the prospect of life sentences or solitary confinement in a US "supermax" prison.
The decision was seen as clearing the way for their deportation following an eight-year battle through British and European courts. The Home Office believes the decision should have exhausted legal avenues and is preparing to send them to the US as soon as possible.
All five are making desperate, last-ditch attempts to oppose the process. Supporters of Ahmad and Ahsan called for them to be prosecuted in this country for their alleged connection to an extremist website.
But the DPP has rejected that request. In his statement, Starmer declined to support the charges. He said: "I have refused to give my consent to Mr [Karl] Watkin to bring a private prosecution against Mr Ahmad and Mr Ahsan for offences under the Terrorism Act 2000.
"The underlying evidence in support of these alleged offences is in the possession of the USA. The material provided to me in support of the proposed private prosecution has been carefully considered by a specialist lawyer in the CPS special crime and counter-terrorism division."
Starmer said he had also consulted the attorney general, Dominic Grieve QC. "I have received written confirmation that the Metropolitan police service do not intend to refer any further documents or other material to the CPS for consideration," the DPP added.
The grounds of Ahmad's application to the high court was that the DPP must be given more time to consider whether or not a private prosecution against him and Ahsan can go ahead in the UK. It is not clear whether the court will still be prepared to hear any claim given the DPP's decision.
Karl Watkin, the businessman who brought the private prosecution, said: "The DPP's decision smacks of a determined effort to extradite both these men [Ahmad and Ahsan]. Yet their case is worlds apart from that of convicted Egyptian terrorist Abu Hamza.
"The public will decry this decision as it supports a trial of British men thousands of miles from Britain, where the alleged crime was committed, simply because, in the DPP's opinion, the evidence is too weak to prosecute here.
"If that's not outsourcing our criminal justice system, I don't know what is. To my mind, if you commit a crime in Britain, you get convicted in Britain. These two should be tried here and, if guilty, go to prison here. In my view, the evidence is clear and I have instructed my lawyers to consider asking the courts to order the DPP and attorney general to think again."
Last night the mayor of London, Boris Johnson, put out a statement calling for Ahmad to be put on trial in the UK.
He said: "Clearly the UK-US Extradition Act (2003) is unfairly balanced. In the case of Babar Ahmad if there was a crime committed it was committed in this country.
"There is absolutely no reason why this gentleman should not be produced before the British courts, arraigned and asked to answer to whatever his crimes are here in the UK."
Before hearing the DPP's announcement, Ahmad's family had said: "We are simply asking for the court to put a hold on Babar's extradition so that the DPP has the necessary time and space to make a decision on the material provided to him in April 2012 which was kept hidden from him by the police for eight years."
Labour's justice spokesman, Sadiq Khan, has supported calls for Ahmad to be prosecuted in the UK for his alleged involvement in an extremist website.
Watkin is separately seeking permission from magistrates to bring a private prosecution against Ahmad and Ahsan for other criminal allegations that do not require the DPP's consent.
Legal sources suggested the home secretary, Theresa May, had discretion about whether or not to suspend an extradition order even if a private prosecution had begun.
The court has allowed two days for the applications to be heard. Lawyers for Fawwaz are appealing against deportation on two grounds: prison conditions in the US and claims that the intelligence services have withheld crucial evidence.
The missing material, it is alleged, would, if disclosed, undermine the case against him.
The solicitor Gareth Peirce, a veteran of innumerable terrorism cases, is representing both Ahmad and Ahsan.
Lawyers for Abu Hamza are applying for an injunction delaying his deportation on the grounds of the 53-year-old's medical condition.
They are seeking permission for him to be given an MRI scan. His medical condition, it is argued, has deteriorated partially because of sleep deprivation and continued confinement.
Source: The Guardian UK