Osama Bin Laden’s spokesman back in UK after release from US jail

Adel Abdel Bary, 60, seen here in a court sketch from September 19, was convicted of terror offenses for his role in Al-Qaeda’s 1998 attacks on US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania that killed 224 people. (Reuters/File Photo)
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Updated 12 December 2020
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Osama Bin Laden’s spokesman back in UK after release from US jail

  • Adel Abdul Bary was deported after serving 21 years of a 25-year sentence, amid fears for his health during the COVID-19 pandemic

LONDON: A former spokesman for Osama Bin Laden has returned to the UK after being released from prison in the US.

Adel Abdul Bary was freed on Thursday over fears that obesity and asthma put the 60-year-old at greater risk from the effects of COVID-19. He was deported after a judge in New York agreed he was at high risk of contracting a serious form of the disease, in part because he is overweight.

Bary, originally from Egypt, was arrested by UK police in 1999 as a co-conspirator in Al-Qaeda attacks on American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998 that killed 224 people and wounded 5,000. He was extradited to the US in 2012.

He was charged with 285 offenses but admitted only a few, including conspiracy to murder US citizens abroad and threatening to kill by means of explosives. He admitted to a federal court in Manhattan that while living in London he had forwarded messages from journalists to bin Laden and confirmed to news organizations that Al-Qaeda was responsible for the embassy attacks.

In October, after Bary had served 21 years of a 25-year sentence, US authorities approved his release. He was due to be freed at the end of this year but the date was moved forward slightly after his lawyers argued that his morbid obesity was an “extraordinary and compelling” reason to release him early, especially in light of the pandemic.

Bary will live with his wife Ragaa, 59, at their apartment in London. His return to the UK could not be blocked because he was granted asylum by the country in 1997. He could not be returned to his native Egypt, which he left in 1991, because he would face the threat of torture or death, according to British media reports.

His lawyer told The New York Times: “After all this time, all Mr Bary wants is to enjoy a quiet life with his family.”

He will not be added to the UK’s anti-terror watchlist, under the country’s Terrorism Prevention and Investigation Measures Act, because he has completed his prison sentence.


UN experts denounce Switzerland for sentencing students over Gaza protests

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UN experts denounce Switzerland for sentencing students over Gaza protests

  • “Peaceful student activism, on and off campus, is part ⁠of students’ rights to freedom of expression and peaceful ‌assembly, and must not be ‍criminalized,” the UN ‍experts said

GENEVA: UN human rights experts said on Tuesday they had protested ​to Switzerland after a group of students was sentenced for trespassing after taking part in pro-Palestinian protests at a Swiss-funded university.
Around 70 students at the Swiss university ETH Zurich took part in a peaceful sit-in in May 2024 ‌as part ‌of student demonstrations in ‌several ⁠cities ​during ‌the Gaza war before being dispersed by police.
Students who took part in the protests were opposing the Swiss facility’s partnerships with Israeli universities, the UN experts said.
“Peaceful student activism, on and off campus, is part ⁠of students’ rights to freedom of expression and peaceful ‌assembly, and must not be ‍criminalized,” the UN ‍experts said, adding that they had written ‍to the Swiss government and the university to raise the issue.
A spokesperson for the Swiss Foreign Ministry confirmed it had received the message ​and that it would respond in due course. An ETH Zurich spokesperson ⁠did not immediately respond.
Five students have so far been sentenced for trespassing, resulting in suspended fines of up to 2,700 Swiss francs ($3,516), legal fees of over 2,000 Swiss francs and a criminal conviction on their records which could discourage future prospective employers, the UN experts said.
Ten others who appealed the charges await sentencing ‌and two others were acquitted, they said.