UK Supreme Court to hear extremist bride’s citizenship case in November

Sister of Shamima Begum holds her picture as she makes an appeal for her return at Scotland Yard, London. (Reuters)
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Updated 07 September 2020
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UK Supreme Court to hear extremist bride’s citizenship case in November

LONDON: The UK Supreme Court will hear arguments in November for and against the government’s decision to remove the UK citizenship of a British-born woman who went to Syria as a schoolgirl to join Daesh.
The case of Shamima Begum has been the subject of a heated debate in Britain, pitting those who say she forsook her right to citizenship and is a security threat, against those who argue she should not be left stateless but rather face trial in Britain.
Begum, who was born to Bangladeshi parents, left London in 2015 when she was 15 and traveled to Syria via Turkey with two schoolfriends. In Syria, she married a Daesh fighter and lived in the capital of the violent extremist group’s self-declared caliphate.
Britain stripped her of her citizenship after she was discovered in 2019 in a detention camp in Syria, where three of her children died. The government argued Begum was a threat to national security and should not be allowed to return.
But the Court of Appeal ruled in July that Begum should be let back into Britain to give her a chance to appeal against the removal of her citizenship, a ruling the government called “very disappointing.”
Five Supreme Court justices will hear the government’s appeal against the July ruling as well as Begum’s appeal against the original decision to strip her of her citizenship during two days of hearings on Nov. 23 and 24.
Begum angered many Britons by appearing unrepentant about seeing severed heads and saying a suicide attack that killed 22 people in the English city of Manchester in 2017 was justified.


Hundreds of people storm US Consulate in Karachi, Pakistan

Updated 58 min 19 sec ago
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Hundreds of people storm US Consulate in Karachi, Pakistan

  • Police say hundreds of people have stormed the US Consulate in Pakistan’s port city of Karachi
  • A police official said police and paramilitary forces used batons and fired tear gas to disperse the crowd Sunday

DUBAI: Hundreds of people stormed the US Consulate in Pakistan’s port city of Karachi on Sunday, smashing windows after the US and Israeli attacked Iran and killed the country’s supreme leader, police said.
Police and paramilitary forces used batons and fired tear gas to disperse the crowd, said Mohammad Jawad, a police official. At least one protester was killed and several others were wounded in clashes between protesters and security forces, he said.
The attack on the consulate came hours after Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in a major attack carried out by Israel and the United States.