Sunday 7 July 2013

Abu Qatada Finally Deported From UK To Jordan!!!


Abu Qatada has left RAF Northolt in west London on a military plane as he is deported to Jordan to stand trial on terror charges. It marks the end of an eight-year legal battle to remove the radical preacher, who the Government has described as a "truly dangerous individual" and a "key player" in al Qaeda-related terrorism. "He has been a thorn in the side of five Home Secretaries who have tried to get rid of him. "As far as the British Government and senior politicians are concerned, there will be quiet celebration that he has finally left the country." Qatada used his human rights to make a series of costly challenges to moves to deport him to his native country. The case became a national embarrassment, which critics of European human rights legislation claim has rendered UK politicians powerless to remove someone who they believed to be a clear threat to national security. Today, Home Secretary Theresa May said: "Abu Qatada was deported today to his home country of Jordan to face terrorism charges. "His departure marks the conclusion of efforts to remove him since 2001 and I believe this will be welcomed by the British public." Prime MInister David Cameron tweeted: "Deporting Abu Qatada was a priority for this govt,there was a clear plan+a right and stubborn refusal to bow to what many thought inevitable." Abu Qatada has left RAF Northolt in west London on a military plane as he is deported to Jordan to stand trial on terror charges. It marks the end of an eight-year legal battle to remove the radical preacher, who the Government has described as a "truly dangerous individual" and a "key player" in al Qaeda-related terrorism. Sky News correspondent Mark White said: "He has been a thorn in the side of five Home Secretaries who have tried to get rid of him. "As far as the British Government and senior politicians are concerned, there will be quiet celebration that he has finally left the country." Qatada used his human rights to make a series of costly challenges to moves to deport him to his native country. Abu Qatada is driven out of the prison gates after he was released from HMP Long Lartin Qatada became a household name for all the wrong reasons The case became a national embarrassment, which critics of European human rights legislation claim has rendered UK politicians powerless to remove someone who they believed to be a clear threat to national security. Today, Home Secretary Theresa May said: "Abu Qatada was deported today to his home country of Jordan to face terrorism charges. "His departure marks the conclusion of efforts to remove him since 2001 and I believe this will be welcomed by the British public." Prime MInister David Cameron tweeted: "Deporting Abu Qatada was a priority for this govt,there was a clear plan+a right and stubborn refusal to bow to what many thought inevitable." Theresa May Theresa May believes his departure will be widely welcomed After spending a total of £1.7m on legal fees from the many court proceedings, the Home Office saw Qatada board a flight from RAF Northolt, in west London, in the early hours of this morning. Mrs May added: "I am glad that this government's determination to see him on a plane has been vindicated and that we have at last achieved what previous governments, Parliament and the British public have long called for. "This dangerous man has now been removed from our shores to face the courts in his own country. "I am also clear that we need to make sense of our human rights laws and remove the many layers of appeals available to foreign nationals we want to deport. We are taking steps - including through the new Immigration Bill - to put this right." It was a treaty signed between the UK and Jordan that finally secured Qatada's departure, giving him the assurances he needed to leave his taxpayer-funded home behind. The agreement, announced by Mrs May earlier this year, aimed to allay fears that evidence extracted through torture will be used against the father of five at a retrial. In a shock decision, Qatada pledged in May to leave Britain - with his family in tow - if and when the treaty was fully ratified, a process that to the relief of many, concluded earlier this week. After landing at an isolated airstrip near the Jordanian capital Amman, Qatada will be transferred to the maximum security Muwaqqar prison, which houses dozens of convicted terrorists. It is understood that Qatada will be held in solitary confinement at the jail, until the Jordanian authorities can put him on trial. Qatada originally fled the Middle East and arrived in the UK in 1993. He was granted asylum the following year. His increasingly radical sermons caught the attention of the security services in Britain and in numerous other countries.

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