Lawyer: EU blocks EgyptAir hijacker’s extradition

In this file photo, a pilot leaves the hijacked aircraft of Egyptair at Larnaca airport. Cyprus' Supreme Court on Thursday, Nov. 2, 2017, has rejected an Egyptian hijacker's appeal against his extradition, ruling that there are no legal reasons for the man not to return to his homeland to face justice. (AP)
Updated 02 November 2017
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Lawyer: EU blocks EgyptAir hijacker’s extradition

NICOSIA: The European Court of Human Rights has blocked Cypriot authorities from extraditing an Egyptian hijacker to his homeland until it can examine the case, the hijacker’s lawyer said on Thursday.
Lawyer Nicoletta Charalambidou said that the European court stayed the extradition of Seif Eddin Mustafa so it could rule on whether doing so would violate one of its articles prohibiting the return of individuals to countries where they may face torture or inhuman treatment.
The ECHR decision came a few hours after Cyprus’ Supreme Court rejected Mustafa’s appeal against his extradition, ruling that there are no legal reasons for the man not to return to his homeland to face justice.
Mustafa, 60, hijacked a domestic EgyptAir flight in March 2016 using a fake suicide belt and diverted it to Cyprus. A six-hour standoff with Cypriot authorities on the tarmac of Cyprus’ Larnaca airport ended peacefully after all 72 passengers and crew were released and Mustafa was arrested.
In a unanimous decision, the five-judge panel upheld a lower court ruling which turned down Mustafa’s defense that he may be tortured by Egyptian authorities or be subjected to an unfair trial if he’s returned.
The court in its 29-page ruling also dismissed the argument that Mustafa cannot be be extradited because his political asylum claim is still pending.
Prosecutors said Mustafa admitted in a written statement to police that he only carried out the hijacking in order to reunite with his Cypriot family.
Mustafa dismissed the written statement as “purposeful misinformation” by the Cypriot and Egyptian governments put out to discredit him.
Cyprus and Egypt have a 1996 extradition treaty.