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Despite evidence that Shamima Begum was a victim of human trafficking, she continues to be demonised in the British media and public, a testament to how precarious citizenship is for racialised minorities, writes Fatima Rajina.
Comment: The Home Secretary's decision to revoke Shamima Begum's British citizenship is a major own goal, writes Muhammad Idrees Ahmad.
Comment: Britain created the circumstances under which Begum chose to leave. This is our mess to clean up, writes Ruqaya Izzidien.
Analysis: Begum has not only come to represent the Islamic State's protected and inglorious denouement, but also a physical representation for some of the difficult questions facing states.
Comment: It's now not just the government that has undermined the certainty of our citizenship, but the justice system too, writes Aniqah Choudhri.
Comment: Many British Nazi collaborators faced no consequences for aiding the enemy, so why the double standards? asks Khaled Diab.
Al-Hol camp's size exploded after the defeat of IS in Syria, but now it has become a place of limbo with violent incidents increasing.
Comment: The appointments of Javid and Patel show that minorities can succeed in Tory Britain, but only in exchange for abandoning their kind, writes Sophia Akram.
Comment: With its decision to strip another British citizen - Tauqir Sharif - of his citizenship, the British government emphasises all are not equal under the law, writes CJ Werleman.
This week's round-up of under-reported news from Iraq focuses on the threats to aid agencies and the potential impact of abandoning the most vulnerable people in Iraq.