IS bride Shamina Begum begs for a second chance and insists she was ‘brainwashed’ by terrorists

ISLAMIC State bride Shamima Begum has said she regrets everything she did in Syria – and has begged for a second chance in the UK after insisting she was ‘brainwashed’ by extremists.
Shamima Begum, 19, travelled to join Islamic State when she was 15. Now she is begging for a second chance after her British citizenship was stripped.Shamima Begum, 19, travelled to join Islamic State when she was 15. Now she is begging for a second chance after her British citizenship was stripped.
Shamima Begum, 19, travelled to join Islamic State when she was 15. Now she is begging for a second chance after her British citizenship was stripped.

Speaking for the first time since the death of her third baby in March, the 19-year-old said she was desperate to return home.

She told The Times she had left London for Syria as a 15-year-old ‘believing everything that I had been told, while knowing little about the truths of my religion’.

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Ms Begum married Dutch fighter Yago Riedijk and the pair fled the caliphate as its last bastion in Baghuz crumbled earlier this year.

The teenager, who has Bangladeshi heritage, has since been stripped of her British citizenship.

‘I have sat down and thought about how long I would have to stay here. And I have kind of accepted that I will have to stay here, I will have to make this like a second home,’ she said.

Then in the late stages of pregnancy, Ms Begum appeared to have little remorse when she was found in the al-Hawl refugee camp in February.

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Her apparent defiance prompted public anger back in the UK, but some argued that she was a victim of grooming and should be allowed to come back to Britain.

‘Since I left Baghuz I really regretted everything I did, and I feel like I want to go back to the UK for a second chance to start my life over again,’ she said.

‘I was brainwashed.’

The teenager attributed her early display of remorselessness to the threats she faced from extremists in al-Hawl.

‘Anything I said against Dawlah (IS), they would immediately attack me, so I was afraid of that,’ she said.

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Ms Begum was speaking to The Times from the al-Hol camp, where she and her baby were moved to out of concern for their safety after she went public.

Her son, Jarrah, died on March 8 aged three weeks and was buried in an unmarked grave on the outskirts of the facility.

It was reported last month that Ms Begum's family had begun legal proceedings to review the home secretary's decision to strip her of British citizenship.

Sajid Javid's move was only permissible under international law if it does not leave her stateless.

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Ms Begum was one of three schoolgirls to leave Bethnal Green to join IS in 2015.

On Monday it was reported that an IS fighter being held in Syria had claimed to be one of at least seven students and ex-students from the University of Westminster to join the caliphate.

Zakariyya Elogbani, who grew up in east London, told the BBC he abandoned a degree in business management in 2014 before joining the extremists.

Mohammed Emwazi, the IS executioner known as Jihadi John, also studied at the university until 2009.