This handless hate preacher still can’t come to grips ​with ​this infamous “spork.”

One-eyed, hook-handed Islamic cleric Abu Hamza al-Masri isn’t happy with ​the eating utensil that came with new prosthetics the feds hooked him up with after he was assigned to Metropolitan Correctional Center two years ago. And now his lawyers are using this gripe and many others by demanding convicted terrorist in a bid to get him sent to prison medical facility rather than a high-security federal prison due to his severe disabilities.

The first ever public photo of al-Masri’s spork that he uses to chow down food with his hate-spewing mouth was included as evidence in recent court filings. The filings seeking leniency for al-Masri when he’s sentenced Friday in Manhattan federal court following his conviction last May for conspiring in a 1998 kidnapping in Yemen that resulted in the deaths of four tourists, attempting to set up a jihadist training camp in Oregon and other terror crimes.

Al-Masri’s lawyers have previously griped to The Post that their client has difficulty using the spork to eat, but in the sentencing submission they also outline many other examples of how al-Masri has allegedly undergone cruel and unusual punishment because MCC isn’t equipped to meet his many needs.

“In the more than two years [al-Masri] has been detained at the MCC, and despite obvious necessity, he has never been provided with a handicapped toilet, shower, or sink, but has instead been offered makeshift fixes – such as paddle attachments – to improve upon existing facilities,” says the Dec. 26 filing by lawyers Michael Bachrach, Sam Schmidt and Lindsay Lewis.

“The inadequacy of these facilities is demonstrated by the fact that [he] is unable to accomplish the tasks associated with daily living on his own, and without repeated injury. Nor has he been outfitted to date with two properly functioning prosthetic devices to assist him (despite repeated efforts by the assigned prosthetist), or been given required assistance in toileting and showering, among other areas, in the alternative.”

Prosecutors in court filings say they’re seeking life in prison for al-Masri because he “waged a global war of jihad against those that he considered infidels.” The 56-year-old cleric’s lawyers have asked Judge Katherine Forrest to consider giving him to a non-life prison sentence without being specific.

They also claimed housing at him Colorado’s Supermax federal prison, sometimes referred to as the “Alcatraz of the Rockies,” would violate assurances the United States made to British judges when securing al-Masri’s 2012 extradition to America.

Prosecutors say the government never promised the United Kingdom that al-Masri would not be assigned to Supermax.