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A photo of Shamima Begum, who travelled to Syria as a teenager to join the Islamic State group, lost her appeal against the British government’s decision to revoke her U.K. citizenship. Photo: AP

UK born ‘IS bride’ Shamima Begum loses appeal against removal of citizenship

  • UK born Shamima Begum, who went to Syria as a girl to join Islamic State, lost her latest appeal on Friday over the removal of her British citizenship
  • Her case has been the subject of debate in Britain, between those who argue she willingly joined a terrorist group and others who say she was a child when she left
Britain

A woman stripped of her British citizenship after leaving the country as a teen to marry an Islamic State group fighter lost her appeal against the decision on Friday.

London’s Court of Appeal rejected all five arguments presented by Shamima Begum, 24, although she can still take the case to the supreme court.

“It could be argued that the decision in Miss Begum’s case was harsh, it could also be argued that Miss Begum is the author of her own misfortune,” said judge Sue Carr as she delivered the decision.

“But it is not for this court to agree or disagree with either point of view, our only task is to assess whether the deprivation decision was unlawful. We have concluded it was not and the appeal is dismissed,” she added.

A video grab taken from CCTV on February 23, 2015, shows Shamima Begum passing through security barriers at Gatwick Airport, south of London. Photo: Metropolitan Police Service/AFP

Begum took her case against the revocation of her citizenship to the appeal court in October last year.

Her legal team argued that the government had failed to consider its legal duties to Begum as a potential victim of trafficking.

“Every other country has taken their nationals back – France, Germany, Belgium, America, Canada, Australia,” Begum’s lawyer, Gareth Peirce, told reporters.

“Every country in a comparable position has seen that there is no alternative but to take their nationals back. The UK stands now virtually alone.”

Screenshot of video showing Shamima Begum during an appearance on Good Morning Britain. Photo: ITV News

Britain has repatriated 17 individuals since 2019 as of December, according to human rights organisation Rights and Security International.

Daniel Furner, another of Begum’s lawyers, said: “I want to say that I’m sorry to Shamima and to her family that, after five years of fighting, she still hasn’t received justice in a British court and to promise her and promise the government that we are not going to stop fighting until she does get justice and until she is safely back home.”

Begum, whose family is of Bangladeshi origin, was 15 years old when she left her East London home for Syria with two school friends in 2015.

While there, she married an IS fighter and had three children, none of whom survived.

British ‘jihadi bride’ Shamima Begum’s baby dies in Syrian camp

In February 2019, Begum said she was left stateless when Britain’s interior minister at the time, Sajid Javid, revoked her British citizenship on national security grounds after she was found in a Syrian refugee camp.

A UK tribunal ruled in 2020 that she was not stateless because she was “a citizen of Bangladesh by descent” when the decision was made, by virtue of her Bangladeshi mother.

Last year, Begum lost a challenge against the decision at the Special Immigration Appeals Commission (SIAC).

It’s unjust, complains jihadi bride who joined IS, as UK axes citizenship

The SIAC said that while there was a “credible suspicion that Begum was recruited, transferred and then harboured for the purpose of sexual exploitation”, this did not prevent Javid from removing her citizenship.

The ruling meant that Begum could not return to the UK from her current home, a refugee camp in northern Syria.

Lawyers for the Home Office have argued that SIAC’s conclusion was correct.

The al-Hol camp for internally displaced people in northeastern Syria where British-born Shamima Begum was discovered in 2019. Photo: Reuters

Begum is one of hundreds of Europeans whose fate has challenged governments following the 2019 collapse of the Islamist extremists’ self-styled caliphate.

Begum’s lawyer told the SIAC hearing that her client had been “influenced” along with her friends by a “determined and effective” IS group “propaganda machine”.

Around 900 people are estimated to have travelled from Britain to Syria and Iraq to join the IS group. Of those, around 150 are believed to have been stripped of their citizenship, according to government figures.

Additional reporting by Reuters

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