23-02-2023
LONDON: Shamima Begum, the British national who travelled to Syria as a schoolgirl to join Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) also known as Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), has lost her latest legal attempt to regain citizenship.
The Special Immigration Appeals Commission, a tribunal that considers appeals against government decisions to remove citizenship on national security grounds dismissed Shamima’s appeal at a hearing on Wednesday.
She left London in 2015 aged 15 and, with two school friends, went to Syria, where she married an ISIL fighter and gave birth to three children, all of whom died as infants.
She was stripped of her British citizenship in 2019. Shortly after, she was found in a detention camp in Syria.
Shamima, now 23, challenged that decision at a hearing in London last November.
Journalist Nadim Baba, reporting from London, said Wednesday’s ruling was “clearly a setback” for Begum.
“She is still in the camp in northern Syria where she was found to be living in 2019, four years after she left her home in east London to go to Turkey and on to Syria into the so-called caliphate run by ISIL,” Baba said but “this is not the end of the legal challenge that she can bring, she can go to the Court of Appeal here in the UK and the Supreme Court after that,” he added.
“Her lawyers have even suggested it could go to the European Court of Human Rights, too.”
Begum’s legal team accused the Home Office, the UK’s interior ministry of failing to investigate whether she was a “child victim of trafficking”.
They said there was overwhelming evidence that Begum had been “recruited, transported, transferred, harbored and received in Syria for the purposes of sexual exploitation”.
Her lawyers also argued that she and her friends’ entry into Syria had been “facilitated by a Canadian agent working for ISIS”.
A book released in August last year investigating intelligence sharing between the UK, Canada and other allies alleged that the Canadian agent’s role in Begum’s case was later covered up by the police and Britain’s security services.
The Secret History of the Five Eyes by Richard Kerbaj, a former security correspondent of The Sunday Times, prompted demands for an official inquiry into Begum’s case. Canada and the UK declined to comment on the allegations, as is routine for security issues involving intelligence agencies. (Int’l Monitoring Desk)