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IS Bride Wants To Return To UK To Give Birth

A British woman who ran away to Syria as a schoolgirl to join the Islamic State group has been told she could face prosecution if she returns home.

Speaking from a Syrian refugee camp, Shamima Begum, now 19, told the Times newspaper she had no regrets but wanted to come back to the UK as she was nine months pregnant.

In Syria, she married an IS fighter and had two children, who have both died. Security minister Ben Wallace said she would be investigated if she came back.

In her interview, Ms Begum showed little remorse for her involvement with the terror group, saying she was not fazed by seeing “beheaded heads” in bins.

“I don’t regret coming here,” she told Times journalist Anthony Loyd, who found her in the camp. “I’m not the same silly little 15-year-old schoolgirl who ran away from Bethnal Green four years ago.” “The caliphate is over. There was so much oppression and corruption that I don’t think they deserved victory,” she said. “I just want to come home to have my child. I’ll do anything required just to be able to come home and live quietly with my child.”

But Mr Wallace said any Britons who had gone to Syria to engage or support terrorist activities should be prepared to be questioned, investigated and potentially prosecuted if they came back to the UK.

He said there was no consular assistance in Syria and insisted he would not be sending British officials there to rescue Ms Begum. “I’m not putting at risk British people’s lives to go and look for terrorists or former terrorists in a failed state,” he said.

Ms Begum was one of three schoolgirls from Bethnal Green Academy who left the UK in February 2015.

Ms Begum and Amira Abase, both 15, and Kadiza Sultana, 16, flew from Gatwick Airport to Turkey after telling their parents they were going out for the day. They later crossed the border into Syria. On arriving in Raqqa, Ms Begum stayed at a house with other newly-arrived brides-to-be. “I applied to marry an English-speaking fighter between 20 and 25 years old,” she said.

Ten days later she married a 27-year-old Dutch man who had converted to Islam – and has been with him since then. The couple escaped from Baghuz – IS’s last territory in eastern Syria – two weeks ago. Her husband surrendered to a group of Syrian fighters as they left, and she is now one of 39,000 people in a refugee camp in northern Syria.

Asked whether living in the one-time IS stronghold of Raqqa had lived up to her aspirations, Ms Begum said: “Yes, it did. “It was like a normal life. The life that they show on the propaganda videos – it’s a normal life. “Every now and then there are bombs and stuff. But other than that…”

She said that seeing her first “severed head” in a bin “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,” she said.

In her interview, Ms Begum talked about Kadiza Sultana who accompanied her to Syria. She said her school friend had died in a bombing on a house where there was “some secret stuff going on” underground. “I never thought it would happen. Because I always thought if we got killed, we’d get killed together,” she added.

A lawyer for Ms Sultana’s family said in 2016 that she was believed to have been killed in a Russian air strike. The fate of Amira Abase is unclear.

Ms Begum said losing her two children came as a shock. “It just came out of nowhere, it was so hard.” Her daughter died at the age of one year and nine months and was buried in Baghuz a month ago. Her second child died three months ago at just eight months old of an illness compounded by malnutrition, the Times reports.

She said she took him to a hospital but there were no drugs and not enough staff. She said she was now “really overprotective” of her unborn child and was scared it would become ill if she stayed in the refugee camp. “That’s why I really want to get back to Britain because I know it will be taken care of – health-wise, at least,” she said.

Her family back in the UK told lawyer Tasnime Akunjee they wanted “time and space to process what’s happened”.

Dal Babu, a former Metropolitan Police Chief Superintendent, said it should be remembered that Ms Begum was groomed as a child to become a radicalised woman and was a “victim of brainwashing”.

Gina Vale, a research fellow at the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation at King’s College, London, said everyone had a right to repatriation and she had not renounced her citizenship in any legal way. But Sir Peter Fahy, a retired senior police chief who led the Prevent terrorism prevention programme at the time the girls ran away, said he could understand why the government was “not particularly interested” in facilitating her return. “If the woman was showing complete remorse, it would be completely different,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme. It would cost a “vast amount of money” and the biggest challenge would be for local police to keep her safe and ensure she did not become a lightning rod for both right-wing extremists and Islamic extremists, he added.

IS has lost control of most of the territory it overran, including its strongholds of Mosul in Iraq and Raqqa in Syria. However, fighting continues in north-eastern Syria, where the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) say they captured dozens of foreign fighters in recent weeks.