The mother of remorseless jihadi bride Shamima Begum has expressed fears that her “highly damaged” daughter might brainwash her newborn son with ISIS propaganda.
“Her mum doesn’t even recognize her,” Akunjee said, adding, “They’re eager to take the baby and bring him up as her situation is sorted.”
“Shamima is highly damaged and the family don’t want the newborn brought up by her in that state of mind,” he said.
Historian and author Tom Holland said in a tweet: “If she’d wanted to signal that she was returning to Britain in peace, she might have considered naming her baby after someone other than Abu Ubaidah ibn al-Jarrah.
“[He was] a general from the early days of the Arab conquests chiefly famed for beating the [expletive] out of infidels.”
Ahmed Ali, 60, told the news outlet: “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,” Ali added, who spoke to The Mail from his home in north-eastern Bangladesh.
She admitted, however, that she had benefited from extraordinary treatment at the camp due to the international exposure.
“They gave me my own tent. They’re being a bit nice to me right now because I’m all over the news.”
‘No Regrets’
Begum’s father told The Daily Mail that he was shocked by the lack of remorse she showed about joining ISIS in a series of media interviews.“If she at least admitted she made a mistake then I would feel sorry for her and other people would feel sorry for her,” Ali said, adding, “but she does not accept her wrong.”
“Because they had beheaded people. There were executions,” she replied, “Yeah, I knew about those things and I was okay with it.”
‘Potentially Very Dangerous’
Security experts like British intelligence service head Alex Younger have warned, however, that would-be returnees like Begum were “potentially very dangerous” because having been in “that sort of position” people like her were likely to have acquired certain “skills or connections.”Survivors and other victims of the murderous cult’s reign of terror, meanwhile, are furious at the prospect of ISIS women getting a sympathetic hearing in the Western press, or worse—a free pass.
Ali Y. Al-Baroodi, who survived ISIS’s bloody occupation of Mosul, told the Jerusalem Post that claims on the part of jihadi brides that they were “just housewives,” as Begum has so insisted, are simply false.
“It was hell on Earth and every single one of them made it so,” he said, asking sarcastically if perhaps local victims of the jihadi women should “apologize for disturbing their stay there.”
“[ISIS] demolished cities and hundreds of mass graves, [and left] thousands of orphans and widows,” he added.
Joining the Jihadis
Begum ran away from London at the age of 15 with two friends to join the self-proclaimed “caliphate” of the ISIS terror group. Heavily pregnant, she surfaced several weeks ago at the al-Hol refugee camp after fleeing a losing battle against Western allies’ push to break the jihadi grip on Baghuz, the terror cult’s final stronghold in the region.Her pleas to be allowed back into the UK sparked a storm of controversy, fueled by incendiary comments she made in interviews in which she expressed no remorse about joining up with the jihadis and suggested terror attacks on civilians were “justified.”
Speaking about the legal aspects of revoking Begum’s citizenship, her father said: “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.”