Justice systems cannot handle terrorists.
 
Bruce
 
 

Germany blocks terror suspect extradition 

By DAVID RISING 
Associated Press Writer

Arizona Republic

July 18, 2005





Undated picture provided by Interpol shows German-Syrian Mamoun Darkazanli.
On Monday, July 18, 2005 the German high court upheld the al-Qaida suspect's
appeal against a European arrest warrant, calling into question whether he
can be extradited to Spain. (AP Photo/Interpol, file) 

 

BERLIN (AP) -- Germany's high court on Monday blocked the extradition of an
al-Qaida suspect to Spain after ruling that Europe's new wide-ranging arrest
warrant is invalid under German law in its current form.

The court decision came as Europe moved to clamp down on terrorism after
London's July 7 attacks that killed at least 55 people. Monday's ruling
upheld an appeal by al-Qaida suspect Mamoun Darkazanli, a German-Syrian dual
national, accused by Spain of providing the terror network with logistical
and financial support.

"When one is sitting innocent in prison, it's a terrible thing - I'm going
to be glad to see him home," his wife, Brigitte Darkazanli, said after the
verdict.

The Federal Constitutional Court in Karlsruhe ruled that the European
warrant violated the German constitution and the suspect's basic rights.
Germany's constitution prohibits the extradition of its own citizens.

Darkazanli was taken into custody in October at Spain's request, and his
case was seen as a test of the new European arrest warrant - a system meant
to allow the swift cross-border handover of suspected terrorists - which
came into force in Germany in August 2004. EU officials insist the warrant
will survive the German court ruling.

EU Spokesman Martin Selmayr said the ruling did not declare the European
arrest warrant unconstitutional, but merely the German national law that
implements it.

"From a first reading, it's a judgment that declares null and void the
German implementation law, not the European arrest warrant," Selmayr said in
Brussels.

Darkazanli has never been charged in Germany.

German Justice Minister Brigitte Zypries described the verdict as "a blow
for the government in its efforts and fight against terrorism."

She said the government hopes to introduce a revised version of the
extradition law in four to six weeks.

Darkazanli made no comments to reporters after his release from a Hamburg
jail following the ruling.

Darkazanli, 46, appears in a 1999 wedding video with two of the three Sept.
11, 2001, suicide pilots - Marwan al-Shehhi and Ziad Jarrah - who lived and
studied in Hamburg along with lead hijacker Mohamed Atta.

His wife reiterated his contention that while he knew those involved in the
Sept. 11 attacks, he was not privy to their plans.

"He didn't have anything to do with any part of the whole story," she told
The Associated Press.

Darkazanli is among 41 suspects, including Osama bin Laden, indicted by
Spanish Judge Baltasar Garzon, who has been investigating al-Qaida. He faces
up to 12 years in a Spanish prison if convicted of membership in a terrorist
organization.

Selmayr, the EU spokesman, said the court's ruling was a blow to European
anti-terrorism plans in the short term because the warrant will not apply in
Germany until a new national law on implementing it is introduced.

The United States has labeled Darkazanli's Hamburg-based trading company a
front for terrorism. He appeared on U.S. suspect lists after Sept. 11, but
has denied any links to bin Laden or the attacks.

C 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our
<http://apdigitalnews.com/privacy.html> Privacy Policy.

 



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