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She fled as a teen to join Isis. Now 9 months pregnant, she wants to come home

Author
Karla Adam, Washington Post,
Publish Date
Fri, 15 Feb 2019, 2:28PM
 In this photo taken from video, Shamima Begum's sister Sahima Begum attends an evidence session at Parliaments Home Affairs Select Committee in the House of Commons, on three girls who are believed to have travelled to Syria to join Daesh (Islamic State of Iraq and Levant) in London, England on March 10, 2015.  Photo / Getty Images
In this photo taken from video, Shamima Begum's sister Sahima Begum attends an evidence session at Parliaments Home Affairs Select Committee in the House of Commons, on three girls who are believed to have travelled to Syria to join Daesh (Islamic State of Iraq and Levant) in London, England on March 10, 2015. Photo / Getty Images

She fled as a teen to join Isis. Now 9 months pregnant, she wants to come home

Author
Karla Adam, Washington Post,
Publish Date
Fri, 15 Feb 2019, 2:28PM

When London teenager Shamima Begum fled Britain with two other schoolgirls in 2015 to join the Islamic State, it shocked a nation. Now, she wants to come home.

Begum, 19, is nine months pregnant and living in a Syrian refugee camp. She says she doesn't regret leaving Britain but now wants to return to give birth to her child.

"Now all I want to do is come home to Britain," she said in an extraordinary interview with the Times of London.

Her case raises broader questions about how to deal with the possible influx of Britons who might want to return following the territorial defeat of the caliphate. About 900 people from Britain are thought to have travelled to Syria or Iraq to join groups like the Islamic State, according to the Home Office, and of these, about 20 percent have been killed and 40 percent have returned.

Ben Wallace, Britain's security minister, told the BBC on Thursday that Begum could face prosecution if she returns Britain.

Begum fled to Syria in 2015 when she was only 15 years old. She vanished during Easter break along with Kadiza Sultana and Amira Abase, two other schoolgirls from the Bethnal Green area of east London. The trio travelled from London's Gatwick airport to Turkey, and then made their way to Syria.

The case stunned Britain. The young women were bright and came from seemingly stable and happy families. Their fleeing was seen as a warning of the lure the Islamic State could have for young Western women.

Sultana is thought to have died in an airstrike in 2016. The fate of Abase is unknown.

Her father, Hussen Abase, told Sky News on Thursday that the girls had "made a mistake" and should be forgiven.

"I'm not the same silly little 15-year-old schoolgirl who ran away from Bethnal Green four years ago," Begum said in the interview with the Times.

She said life in Raqqa was mostly "normal," although "every now and then there were bombs and stuff."

She also said that she didn't regret going to Syria and wasn't fazed when she saw the severed head of one of the Islamic State's victims.

Wallace told the BBC that everyone who takes part in the conflict in Syria or Iraq must be "prepared to be questioned, investigated and potentially prosecuted for committing terrorist offenses."

He also said that he wouldn't put British officials' lives at risk to "go and look for terrorists or former terrorists in a failed state. There are consular services elsewhere in the region and the strong message this government has given for many years is that actions have consequences."

Anthony Loyd, the Times correspondent who tracked Begum down in a refugee camp in northern Syria, cautioned about judging her too quickly. He told the BBC she was a "15-year-old schoolgirl who was groomed and lured to the caliphate, and four years later, with that background, she is an indoctrinated jihadi bride."

He also said that she "had no regrets, she was calm and composed but she was also in a state of shock - she had just come out of a battlefield, nine months pregnant, many of her friends dead through airstrikes and all the rest of it - so I wouldn't want to rush to judge her too harshly. We must remember she was a 15-year-old schoolgirl when she left the U.K."

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