Shamima Begum has a right to British citizenship, whether you like it or not
Shamima Begum, from Bethnal Green in Londons East End, did something extraordinarily stupid and extremely dangerous when she was 15. She, and two girl friends from school, told their parents they were going out for the day, and went to Turkey and joined Islamic State instead. Shamima lived in Raqqa, married a Dutch convert, had two children, both of whom died, and got pregnant with a third. She left Raqqa when it fell, saw her husband surrender to Syrian fighters and now sits in a refugee camp with her newborn son. Still only 19, Begum says she wants to come home to Britain. The home secretary, Sajid Javid, has revoked her citizenship. He has said she cannot come home because she is no longer British and that she should instead go to Bangladesh, where her parents are from. She has never been there; Bangladesh says it wont take her.
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Equal access to justice, regardless of race, has always been an issue when it comes to British citizens. But the right of British citizens to actually exist here, regardless of their race, has never felt more contingent. For those of us whose parents hail from elsewhere, our right to be here seems to depend on anything from what we think to whether and how we transgress. We must prove good character not to get here but to stay here.
Javids claim that allowing Begum to return might compromise public safety is not completely baseless. In August an 18-year-old woman was convicted of plotting to bomb the British Museum, along with her mum, sister and a friend.
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Moreover, the risk does not obviate two crucial facts in this case. First and foremost, she is a citizen
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It is not a status to be trifled with in cavalier fashion for the momentary advance of a political career. Whatever the prime minister feels about citizens of the world, the state should not be actively in the business of creating citizens of nowhere.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/feb/21/shemima-begum-right-british-citizenship
It is such a difficult issue. BUT she is a British citizen and a British citizen allowed - legally she cannot be stripped of her citizenship and morally - we raised her, we need to deal with her....