UK Home Office approves extradition of Muslim cleric to US on terror charges News
UK Home Office approves extradition of Muslim cleric to US on terror charges

[JURIST] The UK Home Office [official website] Thursday approved the extradition of Muslim cleric Abu Hamza al-Masri [BBC profile; JURIST news archive] to the United States on charges of supporting terrorism. Abu Hamza, currently serving a seven-year sentence in the UK [JURIST report] for urging his followers to kill Jews and other non-Muslims, faces US charges [PDF text; JURIST report] of attempting to establish terrorist training camps in Oregon, conspiring to take hostages in Yemen, and helping terror training in Afghanistan. A British court ruled in favor of extradition [JURIST report] in November but final approval from UK Home Secretary Jacqui Smith [official profile] was required before Abu Hamza could be deported. A Home Office spokesperson said that Abu Hamza will be deported within 28 days if no appeal of the decision is filed.

The US initially sought extradition [BBC report] in February 2006, but hearings were delayed while Abu Hamza appealed his UK conviction. The US renewed its extradition efforts [JURIST report] in May 2007, after the UK House of Lords denied Abu Hamza's request to continue his court appeals. AP has more.