The Daily Telegraph

Isil bride: I’m prepared for jail if I can bring my baby back to UK

- By Bill Gardner

THE schoolgirl who ran away to join Isil has indicated that she is prepared to go to prison if she is granted her wish to return to Britain.

Shamima Begum said that she was still determined to come back from Syria despite knowing that UK authoritie­s had the “option” to send her to jail.

In an interview with the BBC yesterday, while cradling a newborn baby, the teenager was asked what she thought would happen on her return.

“My first priority is my son, obviously,” she replied. “Because I don’t know whether he’d be taken away from me or they’ll let me keep him or give him to my family while the UK decides what to do with me.

“To put me in prison, to put me in a deradicali­sation course, I don’t know.”

Ms Begum flew to the Middle East four years ago to join the terror group.

She married a Dutch-born fighter with whom she had three children. Her two eldest children have died, but she reportedly gave birth at a refugee camp in north-eastern Syria at the weekend.

Since she was discovered, Ms Begum has faced criticism for a lack of remorse, and an apparent reluctance to disavow the teachings of Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant.

When asked about the enslavemen­t and rape of Yazidi women by jihadist fighters, she replied: “Shia do the same in Iraq.” Later she likened the deaths of 22 innocent people in the terror attack on an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester in 2017 to the “women and children” being bombed in Baghuz, where Isil fighters are making their last stand.

“I do feel that it’s wrong that innocent people did get killed,” she said. “It’s one thing to kill a soldier that is fighting you, it’s self-defence, but to kill people like women and children ....

“Just people like the women and children in Baghuz that are being killed right now unjustly, the bombings. It’s a two-way thing really. Because women and children are being killed back in the Islamic State right now and it’s kind of retaliatio­n. Like, their justificat­ion was that it was retaliatio­n so I thought ‘OK, that is a fair justificat­ion’.”

“I just want forgivenes­s really, from the UK,” she added. “Everything I’ve been through, I didn’t expect I would go through that. Losing my children the way I lost them, I don’t want to lose this baby as well and this is really not a place to raise children, this camp.”

She admitted her disappeara­nce had been a propaganda coup for Isil but insisted she did not ask to be the subject of internatio­nal media attention.

She said: “I didn’t want to be on the news at first. I know a lot of people, after they saw me and my friends came, it actually encouraged them... I wasn’t the one that put myself on the news. The poster girl thing was not my choice.”

 ??  ?? Shamima Begum faces criticism for her comments on atrocities committed by Isil and the terror attack on Manchester Arena
Shamima Begum faces criticism for her comments on atrocities committed by Isil and the terror attack on Manchester Arena

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