Shamima Begum says she believes she will be killed in her prison camp and is ‘living in fear constantly’ as she continues her fight to return to Britain to plead her case for citizenship in court.
The ISIS bride, 22, claimed she and her Dutch friend Hafida Haddouch could be targeted by arsonists in the Al Roj camp in Syria because they are seen as more Westernised or ‘less Muslim’ than their campmates, after a spate of tent fires.
She also denied carrying out atrocities on behalf of the terror group and sewing suicide vests for bombers, saying she can help British security forces crack down on extremists.
Wearing a low-cut pink top, baseball cap and black leggings after ditching her veil last year, Begum said: ‘When the first tent fire happened we just got back to normal and then the second fire happened and then we just live in fear constantly.
‘In the past few months they have happened more than they’ve happened in the past few years.’
Begum is among a 50-strong British contingent of women and children at the encampment, which houses around 800 families in total.
Shamima Begum says she believes she will be killed in her prison camp and is ‘living in fear constantly’ as she continues her fight to return to Britain
The ISIS bride, 22, denied carrying out atrocities on behalf of the terror group and sewing suicide vests for bombers
She added she and her Dutch friend Hafida Haddouch are being targeted by arsonists in the Al Roj camp (pictured) in Syria because they are seen as more Westernised than their campmates
The authorities at al-Roj — the Kurdish-led and Western-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) — have banned black clothing, the colour of Isis, and black face veils.
Some like Begum have voluntarily given up Islamic dress entirely, which she says has made her vulnerable to attacks.
She was stripped of her citizenship in 2019 by Sajid Javid and in February this year the Supreme Court ruled on national security grounds that she cannot return to Britain to pursue an appeal against the decision.
But she says she is willing to face trial in Britain for the chance to come back and believes she could be an asset to anti-terror forces.
Begum, who was sitting on the site of a recently burned down tent, said: ‘The fight against terrorism is not a one-man job, it’s multiple people with multiple skills.’
When asked if she had the skills and experience to help prevent children from being lured into terrorism, Begum replied: ‘I do.’
She previously made a jaw-dropping offer to Boris Johnson, who wants her kept out of Britain, saying: ‘You are clearly struggling with extremism and terrorism in your country. I could very much help you with that because you clearly don’t know what you’re doing.
‘I want them to see me as an asset rather than a threat to them.’
The east London schoolgirl who dumped her veil a year ago now straightens her dyed hair, paints her nails and wears make-up
Begum was stripped of her citizenship in 2019 by Sajid Javid and in February this year the Supreme Court ruled on national security grounds that she cannot return to Britain
The authorities at al-Roj (pictured)— the Kurdish-led and Western-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) — have banned black clothing, the colour of Isis, and black face veils
The east London schoolgirl who dumped her veil a year ago and now straightens her dyed hair, paints her nails and wears make-up, fled her home in 2015 to join the so-called Islamic State terror group in Syria with two friends both now believed to be dead.
She denies her image change is a publicity stunt.
She has since claimed she was groomed by ISIS and her jihadi husband Yago Riedijk from the Netherlands, who she shared three children with who all died at a young age.
When asked about Riedijk’s recent comments that life under ISIS was ‘beautiful’ for the couple, Begum said she never wanted to see him again.
But she refused to confirm if she suffered any mental or physical abuse at the hands of the Dutch extremist, although her friend Haddouch said: ‘From stories what she told me, yes.’
Haddouch, who said she acts as an older sister to Begum, said her children are too scared to sleep at night in the camp.
She said: ‘I said what’s wrong with you and he said “I am afraid to sleep, maybe the tent will burn again”.
Haddouch (pictured), who said she acts as an older sister to Begum, said her children are too scared to sleep at night in the camp
Begum is among a 50-strong British contingent of women and children at the encampment, which houses around 800 families in total
When asked about Riedijk’s recent comments that life under ISIS was ‘beautiful’ for the couple, Begum said she never wanted to see him again
‘I said to him “go sleep, I’m here, I will not sleep”, and then he said “why did you put me in a sleeping bag? after there is a fire I cannot run out in the night”.
‘As a mother I am already thinking these things, but as a boy how from his age can he think like this, it’s really hard.’
U.S.-born Hoda Muthana, 26, once a high-profile Isis agitator, is also a member of Begum’s close-knit social group, so too is Canadian Kimberly Polman, a mother of three adult children in her late 40s; all three were Isis brides.
Last week, a British minister said Begum cannot return to the UK to get her British citizenship.
Business minister Paul ScullyBusiness minister Paul Scully told Sky News: ‘I think the Supreme Court has ruled on this matter. In terms of the actual case, what I don’t want to do is have it out via broadcast.
‘It has been heard by the Supreme Court after the Home Secretary made a really clear ruling.’
Asked whether she still represented a threat to national security, Mr Scully replied: ‘That I can’t tell. I’ve seen the interview there, but I’m not privy to intelligence documents.’
Begum has frequently denied any involvement in terror activities and spoken previously of how she wanted to be brought back to the UK to face charges.
She previously told Sky: ‘I’m willing to fight them in a court of law but I’m not being given a chance.’
Begum said her decision to leave the UK as a teenager was not made quickly and that it was something she ‘thought about for a while’.
She said: ‘I didn’t hate Britain, I hated my life really.
‘I felt very constricted, and I felt I couldn’t live the life that I wanted in the UK as a British woman.
Shamima Begum no longer wears her niqab, now straightens her hair, paints her nails, with associates saying she now enjoys Zumba, listening to Shakira and watching Good Morning Britain
‘I feel like the only crime I committed was coming here so I would be willing to go to prison for that. But for the accusations against me, I’m just going to have to fight against them.’
She said that she would like to reconcile with her family ‘when the time is right’, adding: ‘I don’t think they failed me, in a way I failed them’.
Begum said she is a victim of grooming by extremists, would now ‘rather die’ than rejoin ISIS and admitted she was wrong to say the Manchester Arena attack was ‘justified’ because of airstrikes that have killed civilians in Syria. She also said she had no idea ISIS was a ‘death cult’ when she joined.
She told Good Morning Britain: ‘No one can hate me more than I hate myself for what I’ve done and all I can say is I’m sorry and just give me a second chance’, but she added she was ‘groomed and taken advantage of and manipulated into’ travelling to Syria.
Denying she is a criminal, she said: ‘The only crime I think I committed was being dumb enough to come to ISIS’.
She has begged to be brought back to the UK to face a terror trial. Asked why she won’t go to Bangladesh, she said: ‘How can a country like the UK, who does not believe in the death penalty, how can they expect me to go to a country where I will be killed?’
She said: ‘I made a mistake at a very young age. I know it’s very hard for the British people to try and forgive me because they have lived in fear of Isis and lost loved ones because of Isis, but I also have lived in fear of Isis and I also lost loved ones because of Isis, so I can sympathise with them in that way. I know it is very hard for them to forgive me but I say from the bottom of my heart that I am so sorry if I ever offended anyone by coming here, if I ever offended anyone by the things I said.’
Amid claims of her innocence, her classmates in London have previously said that Begum wore an ISIS badge on her blazer in an attempt to recruit class members to join the terror group alongside her friends Amira Abase and Kadiza Sultana. She previously described with chilling nonchalance how she ‘wasn’t fazed’ by the sight of a severed head. Begum also declared how she had a ‘good time’ with Isis, and justified the terror group’s bombing of Manchester Arena.
There are also claims that intelligence officials briefed Boris Johnson that she had been witnessed handling suicide vests and sewing them on to jihadis, as well as caring for injured terrorists in Raqqa hospitals.
In a direct plea to Boris Johnson, before asking to meet Sajid Javid face to face because he revoked her British citizenship when he was Home Secretary, she said: ‘You are clearly struggling with extremism and terrorism in your country and I want to help with that telling you my own experience what they say and how they persuade people to come to places like Syria and I could very much help you with that because you clearly don’t know what you’re doing in the fight against terrorism and I want to help’
Begum said she came to Syria expecting simply to get married, have children and ‘live a pure, Islamic life’, adding: ‘The reason I came to Syria was not for violent reasons.’
She added: ‘At the time I did not know it (so-called Islamic State) was a death cult, I thought it was an Islamic community I was joining.
‘I was being fed a lot of information on the internet by people.’ She said she thought she was ‘groomed and taken advantage of and manipulated into’ travelling to Syria.
Begum has also never been open about what she did for the group, but it has been claimed she worked caring for injured jihadis in the terror group’s former stronghold of Raqqa in northern Syria.
She told Good Morning Britain: ‘I am willing to go to court and face the people who made these claims and refute these claims, because I know I did nothing in IS but be a mother and a wife.
‘These claims are being made to make me look worse because the Government do not have anything on me.
‘There is no evidence because nothing ever happened.’
She added: ‘I would rather die than go back to IS.’
Begum said she regretted her actions and apologised for the comments she previously made about the Manchester Arena bombing.
She said: ‘I do not believe that one evil justifies another evil. I don’t think that women and children should be killed for other people’s motives and for other people’s agendas.’
Begum said she did not know that women and children were hurt in Manchester.
‘I did not know about the Manchester bombing when I was asked. I did not know that people were killed, I did not know that women and children were hurt because of it.’
Begum said it was ‘not justifiable to kill innocent people in the name of religion’.
She also apologised to anyone who has been affected by Isis and the terror group’s actions.
She said: ‘I’m in a different camp, obviously. I have friends now. I have a security shield now around me with my friends and I feel more confident in myself.
‘I obviously don’t have my son anymore so I only have to think about my safety so if I do get attacked for taking my hijab off, it’s on me.
‘While I’m in this camp, I’m trying to change myself. I’m trying to better myself, because I can.’
In an apology to the public, she said: ‘Of course I am completely sorry for anyone that has been affected by Isis.
‘In no way do I agree with what they did, I don’t, I’m not trying to justify what they did, it’s not justifiable to kill innocent people in the name of religion.’
Begum was 15 when she ran away with two other schoolgirls – Kadiza Sultana, 16, and Amira Abase, 15 – (all pictured at Gatwick airport) to Syria to marry a Dutch jihadi in 2015
Begum now looks very different from her previous image as a jihadi bride in a hijab and head scarf. Pictured holding her baby in the Al Hawl camp, where the child died
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