Belfast Telegraph

Minister rules out rescue mission for pregnant IS teen who wants to return to UK

- BY HAYDEN SMITH

THE security minister has ruled out launching a rescue mission to Syria after an east London schoolgirl declared she wanted to return to the UK, four years after she joined Islamic State.

Ben Wallace said he would not put British lives at risk to “go and look for terrorists or former terrorists”, adding that “actions have consequenc­es”.

His comments came after Shamima Begum gave an interview from a refugee camp in northern Syria, saying she wanted to come home.

She was one of three schoolgirl­s, along with Kadiza Sultana and Amira Abase, from Bethnal Green Academy, who left the UK in February 2015.

They flew from Gatwick Airport to Turkey and later crossed the border into Syria.

Another girl, Sharmeena Begum, also from Bethnal Green but not related to Shamima, had travelled to Syria two months earlier. Ms Sultana was reported to have been killed in an air strike in 2016.

Shamima Begum said she had recently heard second-hand that the other two girls may still be alive.

She told The Times that “I don’t regret coming here”, adding: “I’m not the same silly little 15-year-old schoolgirl who ran away from Bethnal Green four years ago.” Now 19, she said she was nine months pregnant with her third child. Her other two children have died.

“In the end, I just could not endure any more,” she said. “I just couldn’t take it. Now all I want to do is come home to Britain.”

Ms Begum was married 10 days after arriving in Raqqa in 2015 to a Dutchman who had converted to Islam. She said: “Mostly it was a normal life in Raqqa, every now and then bombing and stuff. But when I saw my first severed head in a bin it didn’t faze me at all. It was from a captured fighter seized on the battlefiel­d, an enemy of Islam. I thought only of what he would have done to a Muslim woman if he had the chance.”

The couple left Raqqa in 2017 and two weeks ago they escaped from Baghuz, IS’s last territory in eastern Syria. Ms Begum’s husband surrendere­d to a group of Syrian fighters, while she is now one of 39,000 people in a refugee camp in the north of the country.

Mr Wallace said: “The UK advises against all travel to Syria and parts of Iraq. Everyone who returns from taking part in the conflict in Syria or Iraq must expect to be investigat­ed by the police to determine if they have committed criminal offences, and

Shamima Begum was one of three

London schoolgirl­s who ran away

to join Is

to ensure that they do not pose a threat to our national security.”

While refusing to comment on individual cases, he later told the BBC: “I’m not putting at risk British people’s lives to go and look for terrorists or former terrorists in a failed state.”

But the former independen­t reviewer of terrorism legislatio­n, Lord Carlile, told BBC Radio 5 Live that Shamima Begum will have to be accepted back into the UK if she has not become a national of any other country.

The question of how authoritie­s manage the return of UK nationals who travelled to IS territory has been the subject of fierce debate since the group came to prominence.

In 2017, then Independen­t Reviewer of Terrorism Legislatio­n Max Hill QC, who is now the most senior prosecutor in England and Wales, suggested allowances could be made for the return of individual­s such as the Bethnal Green schoolgirl­s.

The Government estimates that around 900 people “of national security concern” travelled from the UK to engage in the conflict in Syria and Iraq.

Of these, approximat­ely 20% have been killed while overseas, and around 40% — roughly 360 — have returned to the UK.

Tasnime Akunjee, a lawyer who was instructed by the Bethnal Green girls’ families after they ran away, said he was “glad (Ms Begum) is alive and safe”. He told the Press Associatio­n that, at the time of the girls’ disappeara­nce, “the position of the Metropolit­an Police was that they should be treated as victims, so long as they hadn’t committed any further offences while they are out there”.

Mr Akunjee said he had spoken to the girls’ families, who had “expressed the position that they want time and space to process what’s happened”.

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