(5 Mar 2019) On March 5th 2019 the father of a British teenager who ran away to join the Islamic State group in Syria said his daughter's citizenship should not be cancelled and that she could be punished in the United Kingdom if it was determined she had committed a crime.
Shamima Begum fled east London with two friends to travel to Syria to marry IS fighters in 2015 at a time when the group's online recruitment program lured many impressionable young people to its self-proclaimed caliphate.
Begum, now 19, resurfaced at a refugee camp in Syria and told reporters recently that she wanted to come home.
But her apparent lack of remorse has triggered criticism in Britain and the family has expressed its own shock at her lack of repentance.
She married a Dutch man who wants to take her to the Netherlands with their newborn son.
British Home Secretary Sajid Javid has revoked Begum's citizenship - despite saying he wouldn't make a decision that would render a person stateless.
Her family has insisted she isn't a dual citizen. The case is pending in the courts.
Begum's father, Ahmed Ali, told The Associated Press in an interview on Tuesday in his Bangladeshi village that he would still request that the British government allow his daughter to come back.
Ali lives in the northeastern Bangladeshi district of Sunamganj with his second wife. The area is 181 kilometres (112 miles) northeast of Dhaka, the capital.
He asked the British government not to cancel her citizenship and to bring her back to Britain to face punishment if found guilty of committing a crime.
Ali, 60, said he moved to England in 1975 and returned to his village in Bangladesh in 1990 to marry his first wife, Asma Begum. The couple, who returned to England, has four daughters, with Shamima the youngest.
Ali later returned to Bangladesh and got married for a second time. Most recently, he came to Bangladesh two months ago to escape the UK winter.
Ali criticized the British authorities for failing to properly deal with the issue of students who have fled to join the IS.
His daughter's husband, Yago Riedijk, 27, told the BBC this month from a Kurdish-run detention centre that he met Begum within days of her arrival in Syria when she was 15. He said the marriage was "her own choice."
Riedijk said that while he fought for IS, he now rejects the group and tried to leave it.
While it's unclear if Begum has committed a crime, her comments - and those of her husband - throw into sharp relief larger questions about how Western societies will deal with others who joined IS but want to return to their home countries now that the extremist group is on the verge of collapse.
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