To give a balanced view, referring to the caliphate, she also says, "And there is so much oppression and corruption going on that I don't really think they deserve victory."
As a British subject, she is entitled to the same rights and protections as anyone else, despite what she may have done (that will be a separate issue for the authorities). If she turns up at a British airport or consulate/embassy then they should do what the would for anyone else, irrespective of what they think of her personally.
Syria needs to rebuild and having thousands of former IS yobs is the last thing they need so their respective countries have to have them back. Mind you, if she was killed in an airstrike like one of her colleagues, I'd not shed a tear.
In short, she's scum, but she's our scum.
The one that has taken her to the point where she admits to seeing decapitated heads in a basket and it not fazing her, at the age of 19. It could be down to the various "horrors" that she has seen while out there that has lead to her not being fazed by that but to admit she has no regrets about doing what she has done and pretty much only wants to come home due losing 2 children already and not wanting to lose the 3rd.
We don't know the full story, we can only go on that one article for the moment but she hasn't really done herself any favours.
If she comes back, life in prison, without any parole, with the opportunity to interrogate her. She may have useful information.
I feel a tad sorry for her, but If you have made your bed......................
How would you prove she has committed a crime that a jury would convict and what sentencing guidelines would mean life? We haven't got a Guantamano Bay. The fear is that we don't have the legislation / policy to deal with her properly. Presumably the secret services can interview her out there if she has anything meaningful.
How would you prove she has committed a crime that a jury would convict and what sentencing guidelines would mean life? We haven't got a Guantamano Bay. The fear is that we don't have the legislation / policy to deal with her properly. Presumably the secret services can interview her out there if she has anything meaningful.
It will be an interesting test case, as it will surely not be the last.
She didn't join IS to fight, and as far as the report goes, there doesn't appear to be any blood (directly) on her hands. But she has been radicalised, and supports an enemy of our state, an enemy that believes they are entitled to kill those who are not part of their own group. She doesn't seem to have any problem with IS, what they stand for, just their corruption. She has no regrets about the decision she made at 15, and with everything that has happened to her since (death of one friend and two of her own children) that is pretty conclusive support for the life she chose, and doesn't suggest she is planning to come back as anything other than a supporter of IS.
As a parent, I have HUGE sympathy for her family who must have been through goodness knows what over the last few years, and would dearly love to get her back, and hopefully undo some of the damage.
But decisions of law, and especially of National Security cannot be made by viewing things through the filter of "being a parent", it has to be over whether she poses a threat, and I believe she does, both in terms of her views, what she could be "persuaded" to do once back in the UK, how she might influence other, and especially that child to support IS, and take action against their enemies.
My view, we should refuse to let her back in.
I would imagine joining isis is at the very least treason. She was 15 when she went, Im not the same person I was at 15 by any stretch of the imagination. Think this sort of problem is the first of many.
Doesn't it come under the Terrorism Act, to leave the country to join ISIS?