The Foreign Office said yesterday: "Mr Khurts was extradited to Germany after the passing of the deadline for any appeal. It is not for us to comment on the decisions of the German courts."
The return of Khurts to his position in Ulan Bator represents a remarkable change in fortune for the security chief, who was held on a European arrest warrant as he left an Aeroflot flight at Heathrow in August last year for his alleged part in the kidnapping in 2003 of a Mongolian dissident outside a McDonald's restaurant in the French port of Le Havre.
The security official, described as one of the most senior figures in the Mongolian Government, had arrived in London expecting to hold high-level talks with Whitehall officials about closer security co-operation.
Sandwiched between Russia and China with huge mineral reserves, Mongolia is considered an increasingly important political and economic ally by Western powers.
The visit of Khurts was arranged after contacts between William Dickson, then British ambassador to Ulan Bator, and Mongolian officials.
But the Foreign Office later insisted that no formal invitation had been issued and that the spy chief had travelled to London without any diplomatic status.
- Independent