Missing Girls: 'No Sign Of Radicalisation'

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 10 Maret 2015 | 23.17

The families of the three east London girls who are thought to have joined Islamic State say they had no idea they had been radicalised.

Shamima Begum, 15, Kadiza Sultana, 16, and 15-year-old Amira Abase flew from Gatwick to Istanbul on February 17 and are feared to have continued to Syria to become so-called "jihadi brides".

According to reports, they are now staying in a house in the IS militants' stronghold, Raqqa.

Appearing before the Home Affairs Select Committee, Amira's father Hussen Abase, Khadija's cousin Fahmida Aziz and Shamima's older sister Sahima Begum said there were no indications the girls had been turned.

Responding to a question from Committee chair Keith Vaz, Sahima said: "My sister was into normal teenage things. She used to watch Keeping Up With The Kardashians."

Family solicitor Tasnime Akunjee told the committee the Metropolitan Police owed the parents an apology over the way a similar case was handled last year.

It has emerged that police gave the three schoolgirls - as well as four other girls - letters addressed to their families about another 15-year-old pupil at Bethnal Green Academy who joined Islamic State in December.

However, the girls did not pass the letters on to their families, prompting questions over why it was not delivered directly to their parents.

Had they received them Mr Akunjee said the parents would have been "on notice" for issues like radicalisation and foreign travel.

Sahima said she and her family "did what they could" to monitor Shamima's activities, but they would have done more if they had known the first girl - a friend of Shamima's - had gone to Syria.

"We would have questioned that," she said.

Sahima said she was not aware of the Government's anti-radicalisation programme Prevent before her sister went missing.

She said she should have been given a risk assessment under the Prevent strategy when she was interviewed about her friend going missing last December.

Scotland Yard previously said that, "with the benefit of hindsight", letters addressed to seven girls' families could have been sent directly to them.

Earlier on Tuesday the force said the parents had already been made aware by the school's deputy head that the 15-year-old girl had gone to Syria.

But it later issued a clarification stating the deputy head had only told the families the girl had disappeared.

Met Police commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe told the committee it was hard to identify those being radicalised as the scale was so large.


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