LONDON, Oct 5: Radical Islamist preacher Abu Hamza and four other men are set to be extradited to the United States after a British court on Friday rejected their last-ditch attempts to block their removal.

Two senior judges at the High Court in London dismissed a plea by Hamza, an Egyptian-born 54-year-old former imam, to be allowed a stay of extradition in order for medical tests to be carried out to assess his fitness to face trial.

Fellow terror suspects Khaled Al-Fawwaz, Syed Talha Ahsan, Adel Abdul Bary and Babar Ahmad were also denied an injunction.

Judge John Thomas said: “The applications by all five claimants must be dismissed. It follows that their extradition to the United States of America may proceed immediately.” The European Court of Human Rights ruled in September that all five men could be extradited, but the High Court ordered the government to halt their removal while it heard their final appeals.

The government dismissed the appeals as delaying tactics. They are now set to be flown out of Britain to be incarcerated in ADX Florence, the “supermax” jail in the United States.

Lawyers for Abu Hamza, who has been indicted in the United States on charges including setting up an Al Qaeda-style training camp for militants in the state of Oregon, argued that he should not be extradited because he needs a brain scan.

They told the court he suffers from sleep deprivation and memory loss which make him unfit to plead, as well as infections in the stumps of his two amputated arms.

Hamza has also been charged with criminal conduct related to the taking of 16 hostages in Yemen in 1998 and with advocating jihad in Afghanistan in 2001.

He rose to prominence in the 1990s when he gave fiery sermons at the Finsbury Park mosque in north London, but has been in prison in Britain for eight years after being convicted of inciting hatred.

Ahmad and Ahsan, both British nationals, are accused of operating websites supporting Chechen and Afghan militants. Fawwaz and Bary have been in prison without trial since 1999, while Ahmad has been behind bars since 2004 and Ahsan since 2006.

Lawyers for Fawwaz, a 50-year-old Saudi national who was indicted by the United States, said he had disassociated himself from Osama bin Laden.—AFP

Opinion

Editorial

Falling temperatures
Updated 04 Jan, 2025

Falling temperatures

Vitally important for stakeholders to acknowledge, understand politicians can still challenge opposing parties’ narratives without also being in a constant state of war with each other.
Agriculture census
04 Jan, 2025

Agriculture census

ACCURATE information relating to agricultural activities is vital for data-driven future planning, policymaking, as...
Biometrics for kids
04 Jan, 2025

Biometrics for kids

ALTHOUGH the move has caused a panic among weary parents mortified at the thought of carting their children to Nadra...
Kurram peace deal
03 Jan, 2025

Kurram peace deal

It is the state’s responsibility to ensure that people of all sects can travel to and from the district without fear.
Pension reform
03 Jan, 2025

Pension reform

THE federal government has finally implemented several parametric reforms introduced in the last two budgets to...
The Indian hand
03 Jan, 2025

The Indian hand

OFFICIALS of the Modi regime were operating under a rather warped sense of reality, playing out Bollywood fantasies...