The Scotsman

Begum was victim of child traffickin­g, lawyers tell court

- By JESS GLASS newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Shamima Begum was influenced by a "determined and effective Isis propaganda machine" and should have been treated as a child traffickin­g victim, a court has heard.

Ms Begum, now 23, was 15 when she and two other east London school girls travelled to Syriatojoi­ntheso-calledisla­mic State group in February 2015.

Her British citizenshi­p was revoked on national security grounds shortly after she was found, nine months pregnant, in a syrian refugee camp in february 2019.

Ms Begum is challengin­g the Home Office’s decision to remove her British citizenshi­p, with her lawyers arguing the Home Office had a legal duty to investigat­e whether Ms Begum was a victim of traffickin­g when her citizenshi­p was revoked.

At the start of a five-day hearing at the Special Immigratio­n Appeals commission( si ac) on Monday, samantha knights kc, for Ms Begum, said: “This case concerns a British child aged 15 who was persuaded, influenced and affected with her friends by a determined and effective Isis propaganda machine.”

In written submission­s, Ms Knights said there was “overwhelmi­ng” evidence that Ms Begum had been “recruited, transporte­d, transferre­d, harboureda­nd received in syria for the purposes of‘ sexual exploitati­on’ and‘ marriage’ to an adult male”.

“She was following a wellknown pattern by which Isis cynically recruited and groomed female children, as young as 14, so that they could be offered as ‘wives’ to adult men,” the barrister said. Her lawyers said the Home Office deprived Ms Begum of her citizenshi­p “without seeking to investigat­e and determine, still less consider, whether she was a child victim of traffickin­g, and whether there were failures by public authoritie­s in the UK to prevent her being trafficked”.

Ms Knights continued: “What evidence is available shows that rather than viewing the appellant as a victim, a child that was manipulate­d and exploited, the home secretary proceeded on the basis that she acted ‘voluntaril­y’ in travelling to Syria and aligning with Isis.” Sir James Eadie KC, for the Home Office, said in written submission­s the Security Services “continue to assess that Ms Begum poses a risk to national security”.

“This is a case about national security,” he said, adding: “This is not a case about traffickin­g.”

 ?? ?? ↑ Shamima Begum
↑ Shamima Begum

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