Australia will not apologise to nor compensate Sydney man Mamdouh Habib, Prime Minister John Howard said today.
Mr Habib is to be released after spending more than three years in a US detention centre at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
But Mr Howard said he had also told the United States "in very plain terms" that the process took too long.
US authorities have decided not to charge Mr Habib, who was captured in Pakistan in October 2001 on suspicion he had prior knowledge of the September 11 attacks in the US and had trained with al-Qaeda.
The father of four is expected to be flown home within days and is unlikely to face further charges because Australian terror laws are not retrospective.
Mr Howard said Australia would not apologise.
"We don't have any apology to offer," Mr Howard told reporters. "We won't be offering compensation."
Mr Habib's lawyer Stephen Hopper described the imprisonment as the most disgraceful episode in Australian history.
Mr Hopper vowed to bring to justice those responsible for Mr Habib's detention and torture of the "most hideous, vile and medieval kind", indicating the family might seek compensation from Australia and the US.
http://www.smh.com.au/news/Global-Terrorism/No-apology-no-compensation-for-Habib-PM/2005/01/12/1105423533372.html