Yorkshire Post

Jihadi bride ‘at risk of torture or death after citizenshi­p revoked’

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THE DECISION to revoke the British citizenshi­p of Shamima Begum – one of three east London schoolgirl­s who travelled to Syria to join so-called Islamic State – has exposed her to a “real risk” of torture or death, a court has heard.

Ms Begum, now 20, left the UK in February 2015 and lived under IS rule for more than three years. She was found, nine months pregnant, in a Syrian refugee camp in February this year.

Former Home Secretary Sajid Javid stripped her of her British citizenshi­p, a decision her lawyers argue was unlawful as it rendered her stateless. Such a decision is lawful only if an individual is entitled to citizenshi­p of another country.

Ms Begum is bringing proceeding­s against the Home Office before the High Court and the Special Immigratio­n Appeals Commission (SIAC), which

She left the UK in 2015 and lived under IS rule for more than three years.

hears challenges to decisions to remove someone’s British citizenshi­p on national security grounds.

At the start of a four-day preliminar­y hearing in London on Tuesday, Tom Hickman QC told Mrs Justice Elisabeth Laing that the situation in the al-Roj camp in which Ms Begum is currently being held is “incredibly fragile and dangerous”.

In written submission­s, he described conditions at the camp, where Ms Begum’s third child died in March, as “wretched and squalid”, adding that “the tragic death of the appellant’s infant child... demonstrat­es that fact”.

The court is being asked to determine “whether the deprivatio­n decision rendered the applicant stateless”. The Home Office says the decision does not.

But Mr Hickman said Ms Begum – who is of British-Bangladesh­i heritage – “is not considered a national of Bangladesh and was therefore rendered stateless by the deprivatio­n decision”. Ms Begum, then 15, was one of three girls from London who left their families to join IS, shortly after Sharmeena Begum – who is no relation – travelled to Syria in 2014. Mrs Justice Elisabeth Laing is expected to reserve her judgment.

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SHAMIMA BEGUM:

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