The Court of Appeal in London upheld the British government’s decision to strip Shamima Begum, a British-born woman who joined the Islamic State (ISIS) in Syria as a teenager in 2015, of her British citizenship on Friday.
Begum, now 24, was stripped of her citizenship by the British government in 2019 after she was discovered in a detention camp in northern Syria. She challenged the decision, arguing that it was unlawful, in part on the grounds that officials had not adequately considered whether she was a victim of ‘people smugglers’. However, this argument had previously been rejected by a lower court in February 2023, and she appealed to the Court of Appeal in October to be allowed to return to the UK.
The Court of Appeal emphasised that its role was solely to determine the legality of the deprivation of citizenship, concluded that the decision was lawful and dismissed Begum’s appeal. The ruling underscores the court’s stance of not commenting on the moral aspects of the case, focusing strictly on legal considerations.
Begum’s legal representatives have expressed their disappointment and their determination to continue their fight for her repatriation and justice. The case has sparked widespread debate, with opinion divided between those who see Begum as a security threat and those who argue that she was a minor when she went to Syria and should be allowed to return to the UK to face justice.
Begum travelled to Syria with friends to join ISIS in 2015, when she was just 15 years old. She quickly became a cause célèbre in the UK after several British journalists interviewed her, first in the al Hol camp and later in the Roj camp, where she is currently being held by the Kurdish-led authorities in north-eastern Syria, along with thousands of other foreign women and children.