Why UK revoked citizenship of 2 IS brides


Two IS brides have been stripped of UK citizenship, a report says. /BBC

The United Kingdom has revoked citizenship of two IS brides, details have emerged.

The two women are being held in Syrian camps with their young children, a report says.

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It comes after the death in a Syrian camp of the baby son of Shamima Begum, who left London to join Islamic State and had her UK citizenship revoked.

 The Sunday Times quotes legal sources who name the women as Reema Iqbal and her sister, Zara, from east London.

The Home Office said it did not comment on individual cases.

 Decisions to withdraw citizenship from individuals were evidence-based and not taken lightly, it added.

 The newspaper says that Reema, 30, and Zara, 28, are living in separate refugee camps in Syria along with thousands of other families who have fled from territory formerly controlled by jihadis.

 Between them they have five boys under the age of eight, it says.

 The parents of the sisters are originally from Pakistan, but it is not known if they have dual nationality.

 According to the Sunday Times, the sisters left for Syria in 2013 after marrying IS fighters with “close links” to the filmed murders of western hostages.

 Zara was heavily pregnant with her second child when she travelled to Syria and later gave birth to a third.

Reema has one son born in the UK and another born in Syria.

Home Secretary Sajid Javid has faced criticism for his handling of the similar case of Ms Begum.

 Her three-week-old son, Jarrah, died of pneumonia on Thursday, according to a medical certificate.

As he was born before she was deprived of UK citizenship by the Home Office, the baby would still be considered British.

Dal Babu, a former Metropolitan Police chief superintendent and friend of Ms Begum’s family, told the BBC: “We’ve failed, as a country, to safeguard the child.”

Shadow home secretary Diane Abbott said the child had died as a result of the “callous and inhumane” decision to strip Ms Begum of her citizenship while Tory MP and former justice minister Phillip Lee urged the government to “reflect” on its “moral responsibility” for the tragedy.

Shadow home secretary Diane Abbott said the child had died as a result of the “callous and inhumane” decision to strip Ms Begum of her citizenship while Tory MP and former justice minister Phillip Lee urged the government to “reflect” on its “moral responsibility” for the tragedy.

A UK government spokesman said: “The death of any child is tragic and deeply distressing for the family.”

Prior to the child’s death, Ms Begum’s sister, Renu, wrote to Mr Javid on behalf of the family challenging the decision to revoke her citizenship.

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