Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Good News: Osama's Right-Hand Man in Europe May Walk Free

Surely he'll walk the straight and narrow path and behave himself. If that's not bad enough, the British taxpayers get to pick up his tab. All because the nattering nabobs are so weak-kneed that these monsters could be tortured.

Great way to fight terror.
Terror suspect Abu Qatada cannot be deported to Jordan because he risks not getting a fair trial, judges ruled today.

They overturned a decision by a special panel last year that the extremist cleric, who is known as Osama bin Laden's “right-hand man” in Europe, could be sent to his home country.

The Home Office may even have to free Qatada if the Law Lords and European judges uphold the decision of the Court of Appeal and he cannot be brought to trial.

Ministers would be very reluctant to order such a move which would spark uproar.

Qatada could be placed under a control order to monitor him but this system has proved ineffective in several cases where terror suspects have gone on the run.

The Court of Appeal also upheld the panel's blocking of the deportations of two other suspected terrorists to Libya on the grounds that they may be tortured.

The rulings are a blow to the Government's anti-terror laws as it had signed memorandums of understanding with Jordan and Libya that individuals expelled from the UK would get fair trials and not be tortured.

The pacts are key to removing around 20 terror suspects to countries which sanction torture or the death penalty.

Home Secretary Jacqui Smith launched an immediate appeal to the Law Lords against the Qatada judgment.

The case could end up in the European Court of Human Rights leaving the British taxpayer with a bill expected to hit £500,000.

Ministers hailed a ruling by the Special Immigration Appeals Commission last February that Qatada, now in Belmarsh prison, could return to Jordan.

But a panel of three senior judges headed by the Master of the Rolls, Sir Anthony Clarke, today quashed this judgement on the grounds that the Jordanian national could face a trial in which evidence against him may have been extracted by torture.
Insanity.

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