Hicks 'hours away from Australia'
Hicks 'hours away from Australia'
May 20, 2007 07:27am
AFTER five years in Guantanamo Bay, David Hicks is due to arrive home today to serve the rest of his sentence in a South Australia jail, following a plane trip that is estimated to cost taxpayers $500,000.
The confessed supporter of terrorists boarded a government-chartered Gulfstream G550 jet at the American base yesterday amid heavy security, sources said.
Also on board were Hicks' lawyer, David McLeod, Australian Federal Police officers, Correctional Services officers and officials from the Attorney-General's department.
The plane, which can carry 18 people, is due to land at the Edinburgh RAAF base, in South Australia, at about 9am (Adelaide time) after a stopover in Tahiti.
Hicks will be transferred to the Yatala Labour Prison to complete his sentence for providing material support for terrorism.
He received seven years with all but nine months suspended. He is expected to be released before the end of this year.
The Gulfstream jet was chartered from an Australian firm, Adagold Aviation Pty Ltd, at a cost of more than $500,000.
It is a luxurious, long-range corporate aircraft capable of flying 12,500km at an altitude of 15,500m.
The Gulfstream is powered by two Rolls-Royce engines, and its interior hascomfortable leather seats.
Attorney-General Philip Ruddock said Hicks would not be shackled during the 22-hour flight.
"It would not be appropriate for Hicks to be shackled at the back of a commercial flight," Mr Ruddock said.
Mr Ruddock did not rule out allowing Hicks' father, Terry, to meet his son at RAAF Edinburgh when the jet arrived - but a spokesman said it was unlikely.
Prison staff at Yatala told waiting media the Hicks arrival today would be "bigger than the Christmas pageant".