Black cab rapist John Worboys will be banned from Greater London in the event of his release.

Victims of 60-year-old Worboys, who now goes by the name John Radford, are waiting to see if they have successfully challenged a decision to release him from jail.

If his release is upheld by the High Court, the rapist will be banned from Greater London and Sussex.

His barrister Edward Fitzgerald QC told the court the serial sex attacker had "readily accepted" proposals for additional monitoring - including electronic tagging and lie detector tests.

Worboys was jailed indefinitely in 2009 with a minimum term of eight years after being found guilty of 19 offences, including rape, sexual assault and drugging, committed against 12 victims.

He became known as the black cab rapist after attacking victims in his hackney carriage.

Police believe he committed crimes against 105 women between 2002 and 2008, when he was caught.

Two women, who cannot be named for legal reasons, brought the landmark challenge, arguing that something went "badly wrong" with the Parole Board's decision to free him - and that the ruling was "irrational" and should be quashed.

The court previously heard Worboys, who has served 10 years behind bars, including remand time, has denied committing any offences other than those he was convicted of.

Phillippa Kaufmann QC, representing two of Worboys' victims who are challenging the Parole Board's decision to release him, described the area as a "massive exclusion zone".

Referring to the stricter regime, she added that it was "hardly a condition imposed on someone believed to be open and honest."

Earlier on Wednesday, lawyers for the Parole Board said prisoners released on licence have "ongoing involvement" from the Probation Service and can be put under police surveillance if necessary.

They said such measures allow the board to have confidence that any problems which may arise in future will be picked up and acted upon.