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UK frustrated in bid to deport radical Islamist

frustrated in bid to deport radical Islamist

LONDON (AP) — An extremist cleric who has avoided Britain’s

efforts to deport him to Jordan for more than a decade was told Thursday he may have dealt a new blow to the country’s

exasperated government.

frustrated in bid to

deport radical Islamist

British lawmakers were told a new appeal lodged Tuesday by the

Palestinian-Jordanian preacher Abu Qatada, who has fought attempts to expel him from the U.K. since 2001, is likely to be

considered by the European Court of Human Rights.

An advisory note sent to Britain’s Parliament by the Council of

Europe — which is responsible for the court — said the cleric had submitted his latest effort to contest his deportation

“just in time” to beat a deadline.

“I sometimes wish I could put him on a plane and take him to Jordan myself,” Prime

Minister David Cameron said Thursday, reflecting widespread frustration over the case. “But government has to act within the

law.”

Cameron acknowledged he was growing alarmed at the delays that have prevented Britain from removing a man

identified in court hearings as having been the late Osama bin Laden’s spiritual envoy in Europe.

The British

leader’s anger comes after he believed his government had finally succeeded in drawing the protracted legal saga to a close.

In a ruling in January, European judges said the cleric should not be deported to Jordan because of a risk that evidence

obtained through torture would be used against him there. He faces a terrorism trial in Jordan over two bomb

plots.

Home Secretary Theresa May announced Tuesday that talks with Jordan had produced new assurances that Abu Qatada

would receive a fair trial — a pledge she said would satisfy the European court and clear the way for his swift

removal.

But May returned to Parliament on Thursday to concede the case was again mired in legal wrangling. British

authorities re-arrested Abu Qatada on Tuesday to begin new deportation efforts, believing a legal deadline from him to take

his case to Europe’s highest appeal court — the human rights court’s Grand Chamber — had expired on midnight

Monday.

The cleric’s lawyers insisted the deadline ran until a day later, a view seemingly supported by the Council

of Europe. For some British lawmakers, the cleric’s case has come to symbolize Europe’s perceived meddling in Britain’s

domestic affairs.

“The court of human rights is losing its credibility in this country,” said Alex Carlile, Britain’s

former independent reviewer of terrorism legislation. Cameron is now seeking agreement for reform of the court, hoping to

force judges to speed up their decisions by focusing only on major cases. He notes that Abu Qatada first lodged an appeal

with the European court in 2009 and his case continues to be unresolved.

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