Toronto Star

Girls who fled to join ISIS won’t be charged, police say

Officials urge British teens who fled to Syria to return to their families in U.K.

- JILL LAWLESS

LONDON— Three British schoolgirl­s who travelled to Syria to join the Islamic State group won’t be prosecuted for terrorism if they return, a senior British police officer said Tuesday.

Police chiefs also defended their handling of the case, denying a lawmaker’s allegation that the failure to stop the teens was “a huge blow” to the credibilit­y of the force.

Mark Rowley, head of counterter­rorism for the Metropolit­an Police, told lawmakers that “we have no evidence to support (the teens’) involvemen­t in terrorism.”

The journey of the three 15- and 16-year-olds last month shocked many in Britain, left their families bewildered and highlighte­d the difficulty of halting the radicaliza­tion of young Muslims. Relatives say police failed to inform them that a school friend of the teens had gone to Syria in December.

They say if they had they known, they would have looked for any warning signals of radicaliza­tion.

They also accused the police of not acting quickly enough once they reported the girls missing.

“I feel so let down by the police, because we gave them everything,” said Sahima Begum, sister of one of the girls.

“We gave them every piece of informatio­n.”

The girls’ relatives and senior police officers appeared before a parliament­ary committee Tuesday as it tried to understand how three apparently smart teenagers from east London developed the desire, and the means, to travel to a region controlled by the Islamic State militant group.

Police say the girls were being radicalize­d, unbeknowns­t to their parents.

One followed many extremists on social media.

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