Britain re-arrests

A Can of Man

Je suis aware
Britain arrests Guantanamo man at Spain's request

By Mark Trevelyan Thu Dec 20, 12:46 AM ET

LONDON (Reuters) - A British resident freed from the U.S. Guantanamo Bay prison for suspected terrorists was arrested in connection with a Spanish extradition request on Thursday hours after returning to Britain, police said.
A police spokesman identified the man as 45-year-old Jordanian Jamil el-Banna. "He is being held on a European arrest warrant alleging terrorist related offences that was issued on behalf of the Spanish authorities," said the spokesman.
Police said Banna would appear before a London court later on Thursday. No other details were immediately available.
Banna was taken to Guantanamo Bay after being arrested at an airport in the West African country of Gambia in November 2002.
He and two other inmates from Guantanamo Bay, Libyan Omar Deghayes, 37, and Algerian Abdennour Sameur, 33, arrived in Britain on Wednesday after more than four years in captivity.
Deghayes and Sameur were arrested shortly before landing at an airport north of London under Britain's Terrorism Act on suspicion of the commission, preparation or instigation of acts of terrorism and taken to a police station for questioning.
The two were seized in Pakistan after the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan in late 2001, although specifics of exactly why and when they were detained are not clear.
The three men were accompanied by a doctor and put under escort by counter-terrorism police during the flight back to Britain, their lawyers said.
Their release from Guantanamo Bay followed campaigning by their families.
The United States has described the men as dangerous.
Having previously declined to seek the release of non-British nationals, the British government changed its stance in August and asked Washington to free five British residents held at Guantanamo Bay.
Earlier this month, the United States agreed to free Banna, Deghayes and Sameur but rejected a plea on behalf of another man and is still in talks over the fifth.
Washington did not say why it had decided to comply with Britain's request but has come under fierce international criticism for its detention policies at Guantanamo Bay.
On Wednesday, Britain's Home Office (interior ministry) said the men's return to Britain did not necessarily mean they would remain in the country.
"(This) does not imply commitment on our part that they can remain permanently in the United Kingdom. Their immigration status will now be reviewed," a Home Office spokeswoman said.
(Editing by Ralph Gowling)



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Maybe they're not as innocent as we think they are.
 
Yeah - we are talking big, but I suspect that we will collapse and roll over after spending millions on this case. Spain wants them - whiz them out! We seem to find impossible what other countries take for granted. Why on earth did we ever ask for people for whom we have no responsibility. We are the mugs of Europe and continue to shoot ourselves in the foot at every turn. It seems so simple to me - bad guys OUT - good guys IN - in betweens - has to be OUT. Result .

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Hold the front page!


Oh-oh ! this is a later edit - we already rolled over. Although Spain want them, they are already out on bail. They might well disappear back to their old haunts by posing as women in full burkhas to foll our Air-port security who are scared to ask them to show their face at pass-port control. Ha!
 
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