The father of Shamima Begum, the London schoolgirl who traveled to Syria to join ISIS, said that the UK is duty-bound to allow her to return to the UK from Syria and face the music for any crimes she committed.
Begum, now 19, recently gave a series of interviews expressing her wish to return, but showed little remorse, stirring massive public interest, and prompting the UK interior secretary to announce last week that her citizenship had been revoked.
Ali’s latest comments align him with the rest of Begum’s family, who live in the UK.
Just a day before, Ali was quoted by the Daily Mail as saying, “I know they [the British government] don’t want to take her back, and in this, I don’t have a problem. I know she is stuck there [in Syria] but that’s because she has done actions that made her get stuck like this.”
“I can’t say whether it is right or wrong, but if the law of the land says that it is correct to cancel her citizenship, then I agree.”
Ali said those remarks had been “misquoted,” according to AFP, but there was no further information provided as to what this meant.
She admitted, however, that she had benefited from extraordinary treatment at the camp due to the international exposure.
Alabama ISIS Bride
With ISIS territory squeezed to its final dregs by U.S.-led forces in the last couple of months, interest has grown in the so-called ISIS brides who traveled from the West and are now accumulating in the refugee camps in Syria as the caliphate shrinks to nothing.Begum traveled to Syria as a schoolgirl, aged just 15, from her home in London to join the so-called caliphate. She gave birth in the last few days in a Kurdish refugee camp, after sparking controversy with a number of interviews.
The refugee camp of 40,000 has an estimated 1.500 people who traveled from Western nations, predominantly Europe, to join ISIS.
According to the Guardian, there is only one person in the camp who traveled from the United States to join ISI: Hoda Muthana. Like Begum, she traveled to Syria to be an “ISIS bride.”
Muthana, 24, is alleged to have been a prominent online agitator for ISIS, marrying three members of the terrorist organization after she traveled to Syria in 2014.
Tracked down by media in a refugee camp a few days ago, now with an 18-month-old son, she wants to return to the United States.
At the request of President Trump, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that she would be blocked from returning.
“Ms. Hoda Muthana is not a U.S. citizen and will not be admitted into the United States. She does not have any legal basis, no valid U.S. passport, no right to a passport, nor any visa to travel to the United States,” Pompeo said in a statement.
Muthana’s father has filed a civil lawsuit challenging the government’s position.
ISIS’s once-sprawling “caliphate” that stretched over much of Syria and Iraq, is now confined to Baghouz, a town in eastern Syria.