LONDON: Shaker Aamer, the last British resident held at Guantanamo Bay, is to be released by US authorities to Britain after over 13 years at the military prison, officials said Friday.
Saudi-born Aamer is alleged to have been a key British-based recruiter and financier for the Al-Qaeda militant network and purportedly worked for Osama Bin Laden in Afghanistan, according to US military documents.
Aamer's lawyer Clive Stafford Smith said that his client, captured in Afghanistan in 2001, would probably not be released until the end of next month.
The announcement comes as President Barack Obama struggles to honour a six-year-old pledge to close the facility before leaving the White House in 2017.
"We have been notified by the US government that it has decided to release Shaker Aamer to the UK," a British government spokesman said.
Aamer was captured in Tora Bora in eastern Afghanistan in December 2001 before being transferred to Guantanamo in Cuba in February 2002, where he has been held ever since.
Stafford Smith called word of his release "great news, albeit about 13 years too late".
He added: "They only just gave notice to Congress, so that means that without robust intervention, Shaker and his family have to wait until October 25th at the earliest for their reunion."
Aamer's daughter Johina, who last saw her father at the age of four, wrote on Twitter: "Thank you everyone for all the support. The news hasn't hit yet. We can't believe we might finally see our Dad after 14 years."
Reprieve, a London-based human rights charity founded by Stafford Smith, said Aamer was first cleared for release in 2007.
A US defense official speaking on condition of anonymity said the decision to release him had been taken "taking into consideration the robust security assurances" provided by Britain about how the transfer would take place.
Neither side gave any details of what would happen to Aamer after he returns to Britain.
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Obama signed an order to close the top-security facility in 2009 but has struggled to do so in the face of opposition from Congress and other countries reluctant to take in one-time terror suspects.
Some 114 detainees remain in the prison opened to hold suspects following the September 11, 2001 attacks.
AFP