"Abu Qatada is expected to leave Britain in the early hours of Sunday and should arrive in the morning in Jordan on the same day," a government official told AFP on condition on anonymity.
"He will arrive in Jordan on a military plane, escorted by Jordanian and British guards," the official said without elaborating.
The radical Palestinian-born cleric has been fighting extradition to Jordan for years, although his representatives said he had finally reconciled himself to being deported to the kingdom which convicted him in his absence of terror charges in 1999.
His lawyers took his case to European human rights judges who ruled earlier attempts to extradite him illegal on the grounds that evidence might be used against him that had been obtained by torture.
The new extradition treaty, which King Abdullah II ratified last month and was published in the official gazette on Monday, sets out statutory safeguards against the use of any testimony obtained under duress.
After the Jordanian announcement, Britain reiterated that it wanted to see Abu Qatada on a plane "at the earliest opportunity".
A spokeswoman for the Home Office said she could not comment directly on operational security matters, but said: "Our focus is on seeing Abu Qatada on a plane to Jordan at the earliest opportunity."
A Spanish judge once branded Abu Qatada the right-hand man in Europe of Osama bin Laden, although Abu Qatada denies ever having met the now slain Al-Qaeda leader.
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