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Two of the three British residents who returned from Guantanamo Bay yesterday have been arrested in London over Spanish extradition warrants on terrorism-related charges today, while the third was released without charge.
Jamil el-Banna, Omar Deghayes and Abdennour Sameur, flew into London under police guard after being held at the American internment camp without being charged.
Mr el-Banna, who was held for five years after he was seized in Gambia and handed over to US authorities, was arrested this morning after being accused in Spain of belonging to an al-Qaeda terror cell called the Islamic Alliance between 1996 and 2001.
He appeared in court and was later granted bail and released this afternoon where he was welcomed by his family – including a young son he has never met – for the first time since 2002.

Meanwhile Mr Deghayes, a 38-year-old Libyan, spent the day at Paddington Police station where he was held under the Terrorism Act 2000 and questioned on suspicion of the preparation, commission or instigation of terrorism acts
He was released this afternoon only to be re-arrested under EU extradition laws on behalf of Spain and then granted bail.
Mr Sameur, a 34-year-old Algerian, was also questioned under the same circumstances as Mr Deghayes in Paddington, but released without charge this afternoon.
In a hearing at the City of Westminster court earlier today Mr el-Banna, a 45-year-old Palestinian-Jordanian, was granted bail, with part of the £50,000 surety supplied by Oscar-winning British actress Vanessa Redgrave.
Ms Redgrave, an active human rights campaigner and member of the Guantanamo Human Rights Commission, sat in court alongside Mr el-Banna’s wife Sabah and other family members and supporters including Moazzam Begg, the Birmingham man who was freed from Guantanamo Bay in 2005.
Described by his lawyer Clive Stafford Smith as looking “like Santa Claus”, Mr el-Banna appeared in court to have aged dramatically since his being jailed in Guantanamo Bay. He had a straggly grey beard and long hair almost to his waist, and dressed in blue jacket over a tunic-style outfit.
He left just before 4pm, walking out the front doors of the court accompanied by his wife. The couple got into a taxi and headed for their north-west London home where it is believed they planned to celebrate what remains of the Muslim festival of Eid al-Adha.
Mr el-Banna made a brief statement saying: “Thank you very much everybody, my solicitor, the British people, the British Government for your help. I’m tired. I want to go home and see my children.”
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I find it amazing you would bring these guys back when they arent even british citizens who wer caught fighting in third country. I think the sun has finally set on a once great britain
iain forrest, surfers paradise, australia
Freedom that what we want.
We are the new world slave of the super rich and over paid governments.
New rule of the new world if you don't do as we tell you then you are a one of them.
moe, wales,
Well done to the Human Rights Lawyers and Ms Vanessa Redgrave, actress, for her continuing fight against injustice.
I hope those that rant on about the evil West note this and that injustices exists around the world and all need fighting. The biggest injustice is the poverty and illiteracy.
shoukat, London, UK
Any charges lodged by the US should be automaticaly
nullified by the civilized world for obvious reasons.
The US has no credibility and no rights in the
World Courts and no position in civilized society.!
Until the US has faced charges for it's War Crimes,
And Crimes against Humanity it doesn't have human
morals, nor authority to accuse anyone!
Only then should the US like Germany be accepted
as a participant in civilized society!
jason johns, LOU, US KY