http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-2502085,00.html 
Heathrow terror suspect set to be extradited 
Zahid Hussain of The Times in Islamabad and Daniel McGrory
Times Online     December 13, 2006       

Pakistan today cleared the way for the handover of Rashid Rauf, the Briton
alleged to have masterminded the plot to blow up trans-Atlantic passenger
planes, after a surprise move by a judge to drop terror charges against him.


British officials have been trying to extradite the 25-year-old from
Birmingham for five months. 

The dramatic ruling by a court in Rawalpindi is being seen as part of an
agreement to speed up his return to the UK where Scotland Yard detectives
want to question Mr Rauf about the Heathrow plot and his possible links to
the 7/7 suicide bombers in London. 

British police have not been allowed to talk to him since he was seized by
Pakistani agents in August. 

His detention triggered a series of arrests across the UK and forced
ministers to go public on claims that British-born terrorists were about to
detonate liquid explosives on planes flying from Heathrow to the US. 

Thousands of passengers were left stranded at British airports and flights
grounded. Pakistan officials named Mr Rauf as the ring leader and claimed
his arrest led to them uncovering the Heathrow plot. 

Eleven men, most of Pakistani origin, have been charged in the UK with
conspiracy to murder and preparing an act of terrorism. 

Mr Rauf has always denied any links with terrorism but the judge ruled that
he must still face trial next week on charges of carrying fake identity
documents. 

Pakistani officials told The Times that while there is no extradition treaty
with the UK they are prepared to return Mr Rauf if the British authorities
want to question him. 

The official also said they have been asked by Britain to reveal no more
details about their investigations into Mr Rauf. 

British police have already said they want to interview him about the murder
of his uncle, Mohammad Saeed, 54, who was stabbed close to his home in Alum
Rock, Birmingham in 2002. 

Mr Rauf, who has dual nationality, is reported to have fled to Pakistan
shortly afterwards. 

Police are keen to know whether he met two of the 7/7 bombers, Mohammed
Sidique Khan and Shehzad Tanweer, who are known to have visited Pakistan
shortly before they and two other British Muslims blew up three underground
trains and a London double decker bus killing 52 people in July 2005. 

Counter terror detectives want to discover if Mr Rauf has any information
about what the two bombers did during their visit to Pakistan. 

Senior intelligence officials in Islamabad say Mr Rauf married a relative of
Maulana Masood Azhar, the founder and leader of Jaish-e-Mohammed, an
Islamist militant group in Pakistan. 

On August 26 Aftab Khan Sherpao, Pakistan's Interior minister, alleged Mr
Rauf had "wider international links" with Islamic terror groups but offered
no evidence to back up his claim. 

Yesterday his lawyer, Hashmat Habib, said the court's decision to drop the
terror charges clears his name of any involvement in any bomb plots. 

He said of the fraud charges still facing Mr Rauf, "These are minor charges
and we hope to see him free after his trial on December 20." 

Prosecutors in Pakistan claimed Mr Rauf was in possession of 29 bottles of
the chemical hydrogen peroxide which was meant to be used to blow up the
passenger jets. 

His lawyer said: "They failed to produce any evidence to support the
allegations." 

"This chemical is also used to heal wounds." 

Mr Rauf, whose whereabouts have been kept secret until he appeared in court
today, was allowed to speak to his grandmother and told her he was in good
health. 

Rawalpindi's police chief Saud Aziz said he will contest the court's
decision and insisted Mr Rauf had been involved in planning terrorist
activities. 

"We did recover hydrogen peroxide from his possession and concentrated
hydrogen peroxide mixed with gas can cause explosions," Mr Aziz said. 

A senior official told The Times the absence of an extradition treaty
between the two nations should not prevent Mr Rauf's deportation, as
Pakistan is a signatory to various international protocols and conventions
related to exchange of fugitives. 

In the past Pakistan has returned several British nationals wanted on
criminal charges. 

 

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