Senior ministers are resigned to the prospect that the two British prisoners who face US military tribunals at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba cannot be repatriated to stand trial in UK courts because, as one US official put it, Britain has "no law to prosecute them."
The stalemate has become hugely embarrassing to British Prime Minister Tony Blair as he heads for Washington this week to enjoy the rare honor of addressing a joint session of US Congress.
The Britons are among six designated prisoners -- held incommunicado for 18 months since the Afghan campaign -- facing secret justice before a military tribunal. If they plead not guilty, they could risk the death penalty for alleged terrorist offences.
The fact that two of the six are British citizens has led to speculation in Whitehall that they may have been chosen in the hope that, faced with a strong prosecution case, they will accept plea-bargaining and tell what they know in return for leniency.
But British officials deny claims by MPs who have visited Capitol Hill that a formal US offer to send back Moazzam Begg and Feroz Abbasi was rejected by David Blunkett, the home secretary, because he could not guarantee, as the Bush administration had demanded, that they would face trial in Britain for alleged intelligence offenses.
"That offer might have been discussed among US officials, but there were the usual fissures between the state department and the department of defense. It was never agreed among them," said one Whitehall official. The US defense department would control a military tribunal at Guantanamo.
One former minister with close military and political contacts in the US is adamant that he was told in Washington: "We would be happy to send these guys back, but you have no law to prosecute them. We are not going to just let them go."
British lawyers say that intelligence- or interrogation-based evidence would make it hard for the crown prosecution service even to try to mount a successful prosecution and that, in any case, defense lawyers would argue that lack of access to their clients for 18 months rendered a fair trial impossible.
The news that the British government was giving up hopes of repatriation came as the wife of one of the British men added to pressure on Blair by calling for her husband to be brought back to this country.
On the first birthday of the couple's son, Sally Begg, from Birmingham, yesterday asked the prime minister to intervene on Moazzam's behalf so that he might meet the baby he has never seen. Begg asked that her husband be repatriated and face justice in a British court.
Begg, 35, was arrested in Pakistan where he had been running an Islamic school, and was transferred to Bagram air base in Afghanistan before being moved to Guantanamo Bay.
Begg, who was in the family's Islamabad home when her husband was arrested, said: "I think he should be brought back home where I can see him, where the children can see him, where he can see his baby that he has never seen and who is one year old today."
Speaking to BBC Radio West Midlands she made a personal appeal to Blair: "I would say 'You are a father, you are a husband and you are there for your wife. I want my husband to be there for my children and for me and I need him just like your wife needs you.'"
Family and friends of Abbasi say they are extremely concerned for the mental health of the former computing student from south London.
The Abbasi family's local MP, for Croydon Central, Geraint Davies, said: "I fear that his mental health will have been adversely affected by his treatment, and he may not be fit to face trial or brief a lawyer to mount a proper defense."
Since the camp opened there have been 28 reported suicide attempts involving 18 of the inmates.
Some lawyers in the US have their doubts that the US would agree to transfer the British inmates to US territory for trial.
"It seems unlikely the US would give a civil American trial just to the English people, because then how would they justify not doing the same for the 674 others?" Clive Stafford Smith, a lawyer who has represented some of the British inmates in court cases in the US, said.
Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) is to visit Russia next month for a summit of the BRICS bloc of developing economies, Chinese Minister of Foreign Affairs Wang Yi (王毅) said on Thursday, a move that comes as Moscow and Beijing seek to counter the West’s global influence. Xi’s visit to Russia would be his second since the Kremlin sent troops into Ukraine in February 2022. China claims to take a neutral position in the conflict, but it has backed the Kremlin’s contentions that Russia’s action was provoked by the West, and it continues to supply key components needed by Moscow for
Japan scrambled fighter jets after Russian aircraft flew around the archipelago for the first time in five years, Tokyo said yesterday. From Thursday morning to afternoon, the Russian Tu-142 aircraft flew from the sea between Japan and South Korea toward the southern Okinawa region, the Japanese Ministry of Defense said in a statement. They then traveled north over the Pacific Ocean and finished their journey off the northern island of Hokkaido, it added. The planes did not enter Japanese airspace, but flew over an area subject to a territorial dispute between Japan and Russia, a ministry official said. “In response, we mobilized Air Self-Defense
CRITICISM: ‘One has to choose the lesser of two evils,’ Pope Francis said, as he criticized Trump’s anti-immigrant policies and Harris’ pro-choice position Pope Francis on Friday accused both former US president Donald Trump and US Vice President Kamala Harris of being “against life” as he returned to Rome from a 12-day tour of the Asia-Pacific region. The 87-year-old pontiff’s comments on the US presidential hopefuls came as he defied health concerns to connect with believers from the jungle of Papua New Guinea to the skyscrapers of Singapore. It was Francis’ longest trip in duration and distance since becoming head of the world’s nearly 1.4 billion Roman Catholics more than 11 years ago. Despite the marathon visit, he held a long and spirited
The pitch is a classic: A young celebrity with no climbing experience spends a year in hard training and scales Mount Everest, succeeding against some — if not all — odds. French YouTuber Ines Benazzouz, known as Inoxtag, brought the story to life with a two-hour-plus documentary about his year preparing for the ultimate challenge. The film, titled Kaizen, proved a smash hit on its release last weekend. Young fans queued around the block to get into a preview screening in Paris, with Inoxtag’s management on Monday saying the film had smashed the box office record for a special cinema