header-logo header-logo

Shamima Begum: stateless

171888
Graham Zellick KC asks: what does this sorry tale say about our justice system?

A 15-year-old girl from east London, together with two school friends, secretly travels to Syria via Turkey. She has used a passport stolen from her sister. They have been radicalised and groomed, hold extremist views and wish to support ISIL and the caliphate. Within ten days of her arrival, she has been married to an ISIL fighter much older than her. Over succeeding years she gives birth to three children, all of whom die in infancy. She is no longer with her husband, who is believed to be in detention somewhere. She resides in a refugee camp, where life is challenging and not without risk.

The young woman, Shamima Begum, was born in the UK and had British citizenship from birth. She grew up in the Bangladeshi community in Bethnal Green. There are grounds to believe there were failures by the local authority, the police and her school that otherwise might have prevented her departure. There

If you are not a subscriber, subscribe now to read this content
If you are already a subscriber sign in
...or Register for two weeks' free access to subscriber content

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Katten Muchin Rosenman—Charlotte Hill

Katten Muchin Rosenman—Charlotte Hill

Katten strengthens financial markets and funds group in London

Hugh James—Keith Cundall & Lee Hart

Hugh James—Keith Cundall & Lee Hart

Hugh James expands national Serious Injury team with two new Partners

HFW—Rémi Ducloyer

HFW—Rémi Ducloyer

HFW continues Paris office growth with public law Partner hire

NEWS
The Court of Appeal's decision in Mazur v Charles Russell Speechlys LLP has lifted months of uncertainty for Chartered Legal Executives while prompting a rethink of regulation and supervision
The assisted dying debate returns to Westminster as Lauren Edwards MP reintroduces legislation that stalled in the House of Lords last session despite clearing the Commons
A little-noticed provision of the Crime and Policing Act 2026 has fundamentally expanded corporate criminal liability
Artificial intelligence is transforming legal practice, but careless reliance on it is creating growing professional risks
The law offers cohabiting couples surprisingly greater protection after one partner dies than when they separate during life
back-to-top-scroll