Abu Qatada given bail hearing date

Abu Qatada is fighting deportation to Jordan
18 May 2012

Jordanian terror suspect Abu Qatada could be freed on bail by the end of the month.

Qatada, described by a judge as Osama bin Laden's right-hand man in Europe, will have his application for bail heard by a senior immigration judge on May 28, according to the Judicial Communications Office.

The radical cleric is being held in a high-security prison while he fights deportation to Jordan over terror charges.

A Home Office spokeswoman said: "We believe Qatada poses a real risk to national security and will continue vigorously to resist any application for him to be bailed."

Qatada's 10-year battle against deportation is in the hands of the British courts after the 51-year-old lost his attempt to make a final appeal to Europe's human rights judges earlier this month.

His lawyers immediately applied for him to be released on bail as it looks likely that deportation proceedings will still take many months. The political situation in Jordan has also worsened in recent months, casting fresh doubt on the UK's ability to deport him, they claim.

The hearing will be held before Mr Justice Mitting at the Special Immigration Appeals Commission (Siac) in central London at 2pm on May 28.

Home Secretary Theresa May is likely to refuse any application by Qatada's lawyers to revoke his deportation order but it is still likely to be "many months" before he is put on a plane home.

If the Home Secretary also issues a certificate saying any application by Qatada to revoke the deportation order was "clearly unfounded", his lawyers would make an application to the High Court for a judicial review, which could be decided "in a very few weeks".

But if not, Qatada's legal team could appeal against her decision not to revoke the deportation order to Siac and the process, including any further appeals, could still take "many months". Repeated failed attempts by UK governments over the last 10 years to deport the radical cleric have cost nearly £1 million in legal fees, Government figures show.

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