Search
1 to 10 out of 21
Results
Shamima Begum lost a court bid on Wednesday to take her case to the UK Supreme Court after being stripped of her citizenship.
Shamima Begum, who went to Syria to join the Islamic State group when she was 15, lost her latest appeal on Friday over the removal of her British citizenship.
Canada will look into claims that a spy working for its intelligence trafficked Shamima Begum and two other British teenagers to the Syrian border, where they entered IS-controlled territory
Shamima Begum, who left her home as a 15-year-old teenager and travelled to Syria to marry an Islamic State fighter, is urging the Britain to allow her to return and be given a 'fair trial'.
The lawyer for the former IS bride, who is challenging a decision to revoke her British citizenship on national security grounds, claimed Begum was "a child trafficked to Syria for the purposes of sexual exploitation and forced marriage".
Comment: Begum's case proves once again that basic human rights are always conditional for the UK's diaspora communities, writes Malia Bouattia.
Shamima Begum who went to Syria as a teenager to join Islamic State was likely 'a child victim of trafficking', her lawyers tell a London court.
As people express outrage over citizenship deprivation in relation to the Nationality and Borders Act, Tasnima Uddin explains that the movement mobilising against these developments must also take stock of the last two decades of the war on terror.
The glorification of British soldiers joining the Israeli army and committing war crimes in Gaza reveals Islamophobic double standards, writes Nadeine Asbali.
Comment: The Shamima Begum ruling suggests that for Britain's ethnic minorities, our citizenship is not as 'valid' as ethnically white Britons, writes Aniqah Choudhri.