Haroon Rashid Aswat (Gujarati: હારૂન રશીદ અસવત; born 22 September 1974) is a British terrorist who has been linked to the 7 July 2005 bombings in London. American officials allege that he has ties to al Qaeda, and sought his extradition to the United States, which was supported by the British government.

In 1999, Aswat, Abu Hamza, Oussama Kassir and American-born convert James Ujaama, attempted to establish a jihad training camp for young Muslims, at the Dog Cry Ranch in Bly, Oregon, United States. During this period, Aswat lived in Seattle, Washington for over a month.

After the project failed, he began a period of travel around the world. By 2002, he was at a religious school in Lahore, hosted by Mohammed al-Ghabra. In November 2004 he met in Pakistan with the ringleader of the London 7/7 attack, Mohammad Sidique Khan, and accomplice Shehzad Tanweer.

By late 2004 and early 2005, Aswat was resident in South Africa. US authorities tried to extradite him with regards the Oregon camp project, but as he was a British Citizen who had committed no crimes in South Africa, the South African authorities refused the extradition request. After the London 7/7 bombings, local South African newspapers reported that Aswat had been living a quiet life there for at least five months. Neighbors and co-workers described Aswat as "a family man" and said that he showed no apparent interest in radical Islamic politics. In reporting on Oussama Kassir's 2009 trial Oregon Live described Lebanese-born Swedish militant Kassir and Aswat taking a bus from the east coast to Oregon.

In the first two weeks following the 7 July 2005 bombings, police sources initially told newspapers that Aswat made some 20 mobile phone calls to two of the suspected bombers just hours before the blasts. On 31 July 2005, following a more thorough forensic analysis of the remains of the bombers' phones, The Times reported that: Loftus claimed that MI6 intervened to protect Aswat while he was trying to evade capture.

Arrest and extradition to the United Kingdom

Having travelled via Pakistan, Aswat was arrested in Zambia on 20 July 2005.

U.S. extradition proceedings and trial

Once Aswat was transferred to the United Kingdom, he was held in detention on a U.S. arrest warrant. American justice officials sought to try Aswat for his alleged role in setting up the Oregon training camp in 1999.

A British judge approved Aswat's extradition on 30 November 2006, discounting the concern Aswat's lawyers expressed that there was "a real risk" Aswat would face inhumane treatment in U.S. custody. But in 2008 he was transferred to Broadmoor Hospital, a high-security psychiatric hospital after being diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia.

On 16 April 2013, the European Court of Human Rights decided that Aswat's extradition to the U. S. would violate his right for protection against inhumane treatment, given his mental state. The UK Government appealed for the case to be reconsidered by the court's Grand Chamber, but on 11 September 2013 that was rejected.

In September 2014, the UK High Court approved Aswat's extradition to the U.S., after it had received assurances from the U.S. Government that he would receive "satisfactory care" there. The High Court's written ruling stated, "In light of the specific assurances and additional information received from the United States government, and the careful examination of the case by the High Court in the United Kingdom, the court found that it could not be said that there was a real risk that Mr Aswat would be subjected to treatment contrary to Article 3 if extradited."

At his trial in New York in March 2015, Aswat pleaded guilty to the charge of conspiring with Abu Hamza to set up a terrorist training camp in Oregon. In October that year, the U.S. District Judge sentenced Aswat to 20 years in prison, and ordered the federal prisons bureau to provide him with "specialised psychiatric care". Aswat was deported back to the UK in 2022, where he was detained in hospital.

In April 2025 the High Court of Justice found that Aswat could be released after completing treatment for his mental illness, despite counter-terror police believing he was still a threat to national security.

References

  • As 3 Nations Consulted, Terror Suspect Eluded Arrest, The New York Times, 28 July 2005