
Andy Worthington Yesterday Omar Deghayes and Jamil El-Banna, 2 of the 3 freed from Guantánamo in December, returned to Westminster Magistrates’ Court in London for the 3rd time since their release, for an update on the progress -- or lack of it -- in the Spanish government’s request for their extradition, based on long-discredited allegations yesterday’s hearing - no major media outlet has seen fit to report on it - Jackie Chase from Brighton’s Save Omar campaign on the morning’s events: "Speaking to a busy courtroom and an overflowing public gallery, Edward Fitzgerald QC, representing Mr. Deghayes and Mr. El-Banna, submitted medical reports which analyzed in detail his clients’ precarious mental state. Although he made a point of sparing the court the details of their abuse in US custody, which had created their current problems, he explained that the reports revealed that both men were suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. He also pointed out that a particular source of stress and mental anguish for the men derived from the electronic tagging devices that they have been obliged to wear since their return to the UK, which, he said, were causing them anxiety, because they were giving them flashbacks to their ordeal in the US prisons in Afghanistan and Guantánamo, and specifically to their interrogations and the array of brutal techniques that were used on them during the run-up to their interrogations. Mr. Fitzgerald then asked for the tags to be removed, a request to which the prosecution graciously acquiesced. As for the extradition request, the Crown Prosecution Service reported that there had been no response from the Spanish government since the last hearing in January. The judge set a deadline of April 13 for the Spanish to respond to the medical reports, and to issues previously raised by Mr. Fitzgerald and his colleagues; namely, that the Spanish authorities had failed to explain why they had filed the extradition request on the men’s return, when they had not pursued it vigorously during their long imprisonment in US custody; and that they had also failed to explain why they wished to pursue the case when both the British and American governments had concluded that there was no case against either man. In open discussions between the judge and the various lawyers, the prospect was raised that the Spanish government might drop its extradition request in the near future. If they respond by April 13, however, the formal extradition hearing will take place on May 15. It is to be hoped that the Spanish will indeed drop their request for the return of 2 innocent men who are struggling to rebuild their lives. For more information on the British residents in Guantánamo, see The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America’s Illegal Prison ( http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/?page_id=17). Valentine's Day theme - Thursday 14 February 2008 - City of Westminster Magistrates' Court, Horseferry Road, London - supporters gathered for Jamil el-Banna and Omar Deghayes's latest hearing in relation to Spain's extradition attempt. London Guantanamo Campaign: http://www.guantanamo.org.uk/content/blogsection/7/40/ Muslim Prisoner Support Group: http://muslimprisonersupport.com/blog/?p=3 Amnesty International UK: http://www.amnesty.org.uk/ Cageprisoners: http://cageprisoners.com/
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