Justice systems can't handle terrorists...nor can politicians, evidently.
In spite of the German intentions...this will not protect them from
terrorism.
 
Bruce
 

Al-Qaeda suspect walks free in Germany 
 Photo
<http://us.news3.yimg.com/us.i2.yimg.com/p/afp/20050718/capt.sge.mxo96.18070
5193115.photo00.photo.default-232x380.jpg?x=210&y=345&sig=gFK12RbFQu4iT2enKK
.8hA--> 
 
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/afp/brand/SIG=ofqlv2;_ylt=Am4x5fdlYM8Hjr.8
iZlsvPgZO7gF;_ylu=X3oDMTA3bXNtMmJ2BHNlYwNzc3M-/*http://www.afp.com> 
AFP/DDP - Mon Jul 18, 3:32 PM ET 
Suspected top Al-Qaeda operative Mamoun Darkazanli leaves the prison of
Hamburg, northern Germany. He walked free from jail after Germany's highest
court blocked his extradition to Spain on a new EU arrest warrant. The
ruling will mean that all German citizens being held for extradition within
the EU must be released until the new legislation is passed.(AFP/DDP/David
Hecker) 

A suspected Al-Qaeda financier was freed from jail in Germany after the
country's highest court blocked his extradition to Spain, dealing a new blow
to German anti-terror efforts.

The federal constitutional court ruled that handing over Syrian-German
businessman Mamoun Darkazanli to Spain on a new EU arrest warrant would
violate Germany's basic law.

Darkazanli, 46, was released from custody in Hamburg a few hours later and
climbed into a taxi without commenting.

Spain accuses him of being Osama bin Laden's "permanent interlocutor and
assistant" in Europe and having provided the Al-Qaeda network with
logistical and financial support between 1997 and 2002.

German Justice Minister Brigitte Zypries condemned the Karlsruhe-based
court's decision as "another setback for the German government in the fight
against international terrorism".

In Spain, Justice Minister Juan Fernando Lopez Aguilar said he respected the
German court's decision, but added: "We will find a way to resolve these
legal difficulties."

A spokesman for EU justice commissioner Franco Frattini said the decision
was bad news for Europe's efforts to combat terrorism -- which have again
come under the spotlight since the July 7 attacks in London -- but insisted
it was up to Germany to make the arrest warrant work.

"The efficiency of the EU arrest warrant as such is not called into
question, but it's a matter of the German implementation law," said Friso
Roscam Abbing.

Darkazanli was pictured on a 1999 wedding video alongside Marwan al-Shehhi
and Ziad Jarrah, two of the suicide pilots in the September 11, 2001,
attacks on the United States.

German authorities investigated Darkazanli for several months after the
attacks but never charged him.

He was eventually detained in Germany in October last year on an arrest
warrant issued by high-profile Spanish judge Baltasar Garzon.

But Darkazanli's lawyers argued that Germans may be expelled and tried
abroad only when the crimes they are accused of are not subject to
prosecution at home.

The government's anger at the decision to free Darkazanli reflects tensions
between the authorities and the justice system over the prosecution in
Germany of suspects linked to the September 11, 2001 attacks.

A Moroccan man, Mounir el Motassadeq, who is accused of involvement in the
attacks, is currently nearing the end of his retrial in Hamburg.

Motassadeq was sentenced in February 2003 to the maximum 15 years in prison
on charges of membership of a terrorist organization and more than 3,000
counts of accessory to murder for his alleged role in the so-called "Hamburg
cell" run by the lead September 11 hijacker, Mohammed Atta.

But a federal tribunal overturned the conviction and ordered a new trial. A
verdict is expected August 19.

And another Moroccan national, Abdelghani Mzoudi, who was tried on the same
charges as Motassadeq, was acquitted last October for lack of evidence.

The Karlsruhe-based federal court found that the new EU arrest warrant
offered insufficient legal protection for German citizens and must now be
implemented with a new German law that allows all extradition orders to be
reviewed by German judges. 


The ruling will mean that all German citizens being held for extradition
within the EU must be released until the new legislation is passed. 


Since the EU arrest warrant was passed in the wake of the September 11
attacks and implemented in August 2004, at least 19 Germans have been
extradited to other EU member states for offences including drug dealing,
child abuse and even Nazi war crimes. 


Investigators suspect Darkazanli befriended Al-Shehhi, Jarrah and Atta in
Hamburg where they were studying. 


Darkazanli denies any terrorist activity and said he knew the three
hijackers "by sight". 


He could have faced up to 12 years in prison in Spain if convicted.

Copyright C 2005
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