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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Kadre v Government of France & Anor [2005] EWHC 1712 (Admin) (29 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2005/1712.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 1712 (Admin) |
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HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
MR JUSTICE FIELD
____________________
Rabah Kadre |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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Government of France Governor of Belmarsh Prison |
Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Hugo Keith and Clair Dobbin (instructed by Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Brooke: This is the judgment of the court.
i) Whether the description of conduct in the extradition request(s) is sufficient to establish all the essential elements of the conspiracies set out in the suggested charges as defined in English law;
ii) Whether the applicant should be discharged on the basis that the extradition request was made in bad faith;
iii) Whether the applicant should be discharged on the basis that the conduct alleged was not properly described in the request.
"the participation in any group formed or association established with a view to the preparation, marked by one or more material actions, of any of the acts of terrorism provided for under the previous articles shall in addition to be an act of terrorism."
"There are thus six steps in the extradition of a suspect from the United Kingdom. First, the foreign court must consider that a charge of serious crime has been properly laid against the suspect on the basis of information which justifies the issue of a warrant for his arrest. Secondly the administration of the foreign country must consider that the charge, the law of the foreign country and the circumstances justify a request for extradition in accordance with the provisions of the Convention. Thirdly, the foreign state must identify the suspect, authenticate the foreign warrant for his arrest, give particulars of the alleged conduct which constitutes the offence and produce a translation of the relevant foreign law which establishes the offence and makes it punishable by 12 months' imprisonment or more. Fourthly, the Secretary of State must satisfy himself that the request is in order. The Secretary of State must then satisfy himself that the equivalent conduct in the United Kingdom would constitute an offence under the law of the United Kingdom punishable by 12 months' imprisonment or more. The Secretary of State may then issue an authority to proceed and must identify and specify the relevant law of the United Kingdom. Fifthly, the metropolitan magistrate sitting as a court of committal must be satisfied, after he has heard representations, that the alleged conduct would constitute a serious offence in the foreign state and in the United Kingdom. In other words the magistrate must be satisfied that a charge of serious crime offensive in the foreign country and offensive in the United Kingdom has been properly laid against the accused. The suspect can then be committed and the magistrate must certify the offence against the law of the United Kingdom which would be constituted by his conduct. Sixthly, subject to any habeas corpus proceedings, the Secretary of State may enforce extradition."
"Where an authority to proceed has been issued in respect of the person arrested and the court of committal is satisfied .... that the offence to which the authority relates is an extradition crime .... the court .... shall commit him to custody ...."
"(a) conduct in the territory of a foreign state .... which, if it occurred in the United Kingdom, would constitute an offence punishable with imprisonment for a term of 12 months, or any greater punishment, and which, however described in the law of the foreign state, ... is so punishable under that law;
(b) an extra-territorial offence against the law of a foreign state .... which is punishable under that law with imprisonment for a term of 12 months, or any greater punishment, and which satisfies
(1) the condition specified in subsection (2) below;"
....
"(2) The condition mentioned in subsection 1(b)(i) above is that in corresponding circumstances equivalent conduct would constitute an extra-territorial offence against the law of the United Kingdom punishable with imprisonment for a term of 12 months or any greater punishment."
i) What are the offences contrary to the law of the United Kingdom which the conduct described in the extradition request would constitute?
ii) Given that the seat of the alleged conspiracy was in Germany and the conspirators' target was in France, would this conduct constitute an extra-territorial offence against the law of this country if the conspirators' target was in England?
"The Magistrate is not concerned with proof of the facts, the possibilities of other relevant facts, or the emergence of any defence; these are matters for trial."
"....[I]t is in my view very important that a state requesting extradition from the UK fairly and properly describes the conduct alleged, as the accuracy and fairness of the description plays such an important role in the decisions that have to be made by the Secretary of State and the Court in the UK. Scrutiny of the description of the conduct alleged to constitute the offence alleged, where as here a question is raised about its accuracy, is not an enquiry into evidential sufficiency; the court is not concerned to assess the quality or sufficiency of the evidence in support of the conduct alleged, but it is concerned, if materials are put before it which call into question the accuracy and fairness of the description, to see if the description of the conduct alleged is fair and accurate."
"Kadre had integrated the European Islamist network, and notably the Frankfurt group of Islamist activists, with whom he had planned a terrorist attack, using explosives, in France, and for that reason he had benefited from a clandestine safe house located at 136 Roderbergweg [in Frankfurt]."
"The issue is whether the Government can establish that the conduct alleged involves an agreement to cause explosions. There is a clear link between the address where Mr Kadre's fingerprint was found on a box of cartridges and the address at which the explosive material was found. It is necessary for the Government to allege that the conduct amounted to an agreement and that agreement was to cause explosions. It is not necessary for the Government to demonstrate that each conspirator knew the full extent of the conspiracy but I am satisfied on the conduct alleged by the Government that there was a conspiracy to cause explosions and that Mr Kadre is alleged to have played a part in that conspiracy. I am not required to decide whether there is sufficient evidence to support a conviction but I am satisfied that his conduct could in law, if proved, amount to such a conspiracy."
"Boukhari made a telephone call to a member of a London Group of Islamists centred around a certain Abu Doha possibly to the aforementioned Noureddine or to Abu Doha himself in which the latter gave him the idea to plan and carry out a bomb attack which was to be committed in France.
During their meeting in November 2000 the accused Benali, Boukhari and Sabour already discussed the possibility of carrying out a bomb attack in France.
The accused Boukhari consequently returned to London, where the group around Abu Doha gave him two credit cards for financing the preparations for the attack, each issued to the name 'C. Aman' an American Express card and a Visa card as well as cash worth the equivalent of 20,000.00 DM.
After this the accused Boukhari flew from London to Frankfurt am Main on 05th December 2000 together with his friend Maroni who, like Boukhari, belonged to the group around Abu Doha. Their joint return flight to London was booked for the 04th January 2001. In Frankfurt the two stayed with the accused Sabour in the flat at Sigmund-Freud-Straίe 55.
The accused Boukhari brought two transceivers from London manufactured by the Yaesu or by Icom as well as an electronic circuit on a circuit board and a strip of paper with the label '38795 Code' covered with a transparent adhesive tape together with the blue notebook already mentioned and a ring binder. This contained, amongst other things, handwritten entries in the form of a shopping list in which chemicals and other materials required to produce the (initial) explosive triacetone triperoxide (TATP) were listed."
"[B]eyond the mere fact of agreement, the necessary mens rea of the crime is, in my opinion, established if, and only if, it is shown that the accused, when he entered into the agreement, intended to play some part in the agreed course of conduct in furtherance of the criminal purpose which the agreed course of conduct was intended to achieve. Nothing less will suffice; nothing more is required." (per Lord Bridge, R v Anderson [1986] 2 AC 27, 39E)
"The function of the Court below was not to ascertain whether there was a case to answer but to determine the issue of whether the conduct described in the Request would, had it taken place in the United Kingdom, have amounted to the extradition offences as described in the charges. The Request states in terms that the applicant was a party to the planned attack in France; it states that the French authorities have evidence in the form of telephone intercepts and witness statements to support this; the Request points to the Applicant's clear central role within Europe in the Abou Doha group; it has shown that those arrested in Frankfurt were part of the same group; and it can point with certainty to the Applicant's direct contact with munitions discovered at one of two flats used by those arrested in Frankfurt. It is thus submitted that the Applicant's contention that the French Request does not disclose sufficient conduct to support the charges is unsustainable."
"Without prejudice to any jurisdiction of the High Court apart from this section, the court shall order the applicant's discharge if it appears to the court in relation to the offence, or each of the offences, in respect of which the applicant's return is sought, that
...
(c) because the accusation against him is not made in good faith in the interests of justice, it would, having regard to all the circumstances, be unjust or oppressive to return him."