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Baby of Islamic State teenager in UK furore dies - group


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Posted
2 minutes ago, evadgib said:

Several posters have fallen for the tale hook line & sinker. Let me explain:

 

1. We (the public) only ever saw her in 7th century attire & therefore have no way of knowing whether she was actually pregnant during her initial interview.

 

2. She later appeared with a bundle. Whether this was a baby or not wasn't clear & if it was we (the public) has no way of knowing that she hadn't simply 'borrowed it' for the cameras.

 

These people are terrorists! Deception is part of their everyday life and a child is a meal ticket they'll gladly exploit if it enables one of theirs to return home & fleece the state upon arrival (house, benefits, school, NHS & all the while being a 'sleeper').

 

HMG no doubt had all this in mind from the onset as, contrary to popular belief, their intelligence services are far from stupid.

Then why not have a trail under terrorism laws and lock her away forever?

  • Haha 1
Posted
6 minutes ago, sanemax said:

Yes, as I stated , you have to apply for documentation , but you are still born with the eligibility to apply for the documentation .

  She was born Bangladeshi through having Bangladeshi parents and although she has to apply for documentation , she isnt applying for Bangladeshi citizenship , as thats automatic , she just has to get the paperwork sorted out .

It's up to Bangladesh to decide whether she gets it. That's a matter of domestic law, not international law. Until she has it, under international agreements she's a UK citizen.

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Posted
3 minutes ago, Kinnock said:

I'm sure there will be lots of finger pointing back in UK by the PC 'terrorists are people too' brigade, but the primary responsibility was hers, and she, in practice, had already renounced UK citizenship.

 

Your Mornington Crescent citation was apt.

Posted

Ship them all to the likes of St Kilda or one of the other uninhabited little islands of the coast of scotland..very heavily mine the waters around the island..obviously contant surveillance will be required.
Then these savages can live out their 7th century dream..or..pay the usa to give them digs in gbay??
Why not?

 
She was born in the UK. Where have you seen it stated to the contrary?
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/mar/06/shamima-begum-must-be-allowed-to-keep-uk-citizenship-father-syria-isis
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shamima_Begum
 
It appears that under Bangladeshi law someone born abroad to Bangladeshi parents does have Bangladeshi citizenship (assuming Wikipedia has this right) which makes it a dispute between UK and Bangladesh as to who has to deal with her.
 
There might also be grounds to factor in the country of the father depending on its laws re nationality.
 
But if this sort of haggling is going to go on for all of the tens of thousands in those camps, it is going to create a huge mess and prolonged crisis.
 
 


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Posted
12 minutes ago, samran said:

Then why not have a trail under terrorism laws and lock her away forever?

If you mean a trial I covered it in #32

  • Like 2
Posted
2 minutes ago, Basil B said:

 

It has been stated that she did not come to the UK until the age of 3, yet no mention of where she was born or lived for 3 years.

 

I'm sure all kinds of things have been stated. But has this been stated on any reputable news source. I can't find it. Can you send a link?

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Posted
47 minutes ago, Ulic said:

We will have to agree to disagree. The UK may not have the right to render her stateless according to international law, and the issue is a grey area because while she doesn't have Bangladeshi citizenship, only the right to claim it through he mother, the UK is not obligated to give her a passport or other travel documents. The cost of 10's of millions of pounds for round the clock surveillance after an expensive trial and jail sentence if found guilty is unsustainable. She should simply be left in Syria to live the life she has chosen to pursue there. Her parents should be investigated to understand why/how a 15-year-old girl was radicalized. Unrepentant and unwelcome to return to the UK is how I would view her.

Is there really such a thing as 'international law' anyway?

 

There are various non governmental bodies that produce judgements that some countries (for example North Korea and China) choose to ignore, but isn't the only real law that of the relevant nation?

 

Posted
1 hour ago, Ulic said:

We will have to agree to disagree. The UK may not have the right to render her stateless according to international law, and the issue is a grey area because while she doesn't have Bangladeshi citizenship, only the right to claim it through he mother, the UK is not obligated to give her a passport or other travel documents. The cost of 10's of millions of pounds for round the clock surveillance after an expensive trial and jail sentence if found guilty is unsustainable. She should simply be left in Syria to live the life she has chosen to pursue there. Her parents should be investigated to understand why/how a 15-year-old girl was radicalized. Unrepentant and unwelcome to return to the UK is how I would view her.

Bangladesh has already declined to process an application for citizenship. BTW I posted a link to UK law on the issue at hand, did you review? Currently the person is detained by the SDF, who likely do not have the capability to detain her long term, plus questionable the SDF can even hold the territory in the longer term. The whole situation with thousands held, having previously lived under IS rule, is an open ulcer which to date government/s do not seem to have articulated longer term policy to address security and humanitarian matters though more cash has recently been allocated by HMG.

 

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-47504517 

 

A few examples from USAID...

 

https://www.usaid.gov/crisis/syria/fy19/fs3

 

https://www.usaid.gov/crisis/syria/fy19/fs1

 

Next place to be attacked by forces opposed to Islamists will likely be Idlib Province with a predicted  high number of refugees and those escaping combat. The West will have exactly the same issues to deal with; well overdue for our governments to get their act together.

  • Haha 1
Posted
1 hour ago, Pilotman said:

 So yes, in a perfect world I would agree with you, but just now, I struggle to give a damn about those that support terrorism, however tangentially and the concerns or problems of other countries who have to cope with them now.  

 

The babies and young children do not support terrorism, even tangentially.

 

And your country's policies with respect to other countries regarding terrorists and their families will in turn affect other countries' policies towards the UK in the same regard.

 

If the UK wants to retain the right to deport undesirable aliens fro mthe UK -- and I think it does --  it can't then refuse to take its own undesirables back when other countries want to deport them.

Posted
1 hour ago, Basil B said:

 

I am suspicious  that:

It has been stated that she did not come to the UK until the age of 3, yet no mention of where she was born or lived for 3 years.

It has been stated that her mother is of Bangladeshi decent, but no mention of her farther, or other nationalities held by either parent.

 

Unless one or both parents had UK citizenship what citizenship did Shamima have before coming the UK?

 

Stated where? Not in any reputable media that I have seen.

 

She was born in the UK. She did not come there from anywhere else.

 

Both her parents have Bangladeshi citizenship. They acquired UK citizenship after coming ot the UK. She was born with it.

  • Like 2
Posted
4 minutes ago, Sheryl said:

 

The babies and young children do not support terrorism, even tangentially.

 

And your country's policies with respect to other countries regarding terrorists and their families will in turn affect other countries' policies towards the UK in the same regard.

 

If the UK wants to retain the right to deport undesirable aliens fro mthe UK -- and I think it does --  it can't then refuse to take its own undesirables back when other countries want to deport them.

But they are no longer citizens, so it can. In my view, the only way to defeat terrorism, now and in the future, is to be as focused and as ruthless as the terrorists themselves, to in effect, make it as terrible to be a terrorist as the terrorist wants to make the Innocent populations they terrorise.   As in all wars, those that suffer most are the innocents.  if you wish to blame anyone, blame the human condition, human beings are just not a very nice species.  

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Posted
11 hours ago, Puchaiyank said:

I feel for the baby who had no choice in parents or environment.

 

A 15 year old was not old enough to make a decision to join a terrorist organization...become a child bride...and the mother of children...granted that is just what she did...why didn't someone stop her?

 

Normally, I would think she deserves another chance...I fear her indoctrination into terrorists hate of all things western...disqualifies her from ever entering civil society again...

She left UK with 2 friends. Who forced her to join Isis?  No doubt, like many others they thought this to be a great idea to end up in paradise one day. 

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Posted
2 hours ago, Sheryl said:

 

Stated where? Not in any reputable media that I have seen.

 

She was born in the UK. She did not come there from anywhere else.

 

Both her parents have Bangladeshi citizenship. They acquired UK citizenship after coming ot the UK. She was born with it.

I think it's a sign of the advanced age of the poster that he or she thinks it's still possible to get away with this kind of statement. Before the Internet and Google, certainly. But now?

Posted
2 hours ago, Sheryl said:

 

Stated where? Not in any reputable media that I have seen.

 

She was born in the UK. She did not come there from anywhere else.

 

Both her parents have Bangladeshi citizenship. They acquired UK citizenship after coming ot the UK. She was born with it.

It was quoted on the BBC when the story first broke, I have not seen or heard any retraction and like many of the facts that woman has said have changed when it suits her, obviously their should be documents to prove one way or another.

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