Shamima Begum spends her time in Syrian camp ‘watching Good Morning Britain, playing charades and listening to Shakira’
JIHADI bride Shamima Begum is spending her time in a Syrian refugee camp watching Good Morning Britain and listening to Shakira.
Begum was 15 when she left her home in Bethnal Green, east London, and fled to the war-ravaged country to marry an ISIS terrorist.
Begum also reportedly enjoys playing charades and dancing to Shakira music with her fellow campmates.
She has now started wearing Western-style clothing - including Nike baseball caps and tight jeans and insists she has changed.
By contrast, she wore a black headscarf and robes when she was found and interviewed in 2019.
APPEAL BLOW
She has pleaded with Brits to keep an "open mind" over her returning to the UK with the change in her appearance the biggest hint she has been de-radicalised.
In a documentary released this summer, she begs: "I would say to people in the UK, give me a second chance because I was still young when I left.
"I would ask that they put aside everything they've heard about me and just have an open mind about why I left and who I am now as a person."
But Begum last month lost a legal battle to return to the UK for a court appeal over the removal of her British citizenship.
The Supreme Court unanimously ruled in favour of the Government and said she cannot come back to the UK for a court case to reclaim her British passport for the safety of the public.
Lord Reed said her legal bid to reclaim her British citizenship should be postponed until she is no longer considered a threat to national security.
JIHADI BRIDE
Begum was just 15 when she fled school in 2015 with two pals to join the death cult.
She later wed an ISIS fighter and had three children, who have all since died.
But after the evil regime collapsed, Begum ended up in a refugee camp.
And soon after, then Home Secretary Sajid Javid stripped her of her UK citizenship to stop her from ever coming back.
What did Shamima Begum do?
Begum and two pals – Kadiza Sultana and Amira Abase – ran away to Syria in February 2015.
Begum used her elder sister’s passport to flee with her Bethnal Green Academy friends.
The trio flew to Turkey and then crossed the border into Syria with the aid of smugglers.
Within weeks of arriving, Shamima was married to Isis jihadi Yago Riedijk, 27, from Holland.
They had two children who died from malnutrition and disease.
The couple were separated as they fled Baghouz, the village where a few hundred Isis fighters were holed up in a desperate last stand.
Shamima ended up in a Kurdish refugee camp where she gave birth to her third child.
Eldest sister Renu revealed that her family had lost contact with her for the “longest time” until .
Begum has previously told how she had no regrets about joining the death cult and was not fazed by seeing discarded heads in bins.
She also told how she had sewn ISIS bombers into their suicide vests.
But in a new documentary, shot in 2019, Begum insists she has changed and revealed she wanted to kill herself after her daughter died while she was pregnant with her third child.
She also tells how she longs for a "foot-long meatball Subway" if she ever returns to the UK.
Begum recalls feeling like an "outsider" in London who wanted to "help the Syrians".
But she claims on arrival she quickly realised ISIS were "trapping people" to boost the so-called caliphate's numbers and "look good for the (propaganda) videos".
The footage is captured in The Return: Life After ISIS, which follows Begum and other Western women over several months in the camp.
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The Sky Original documentary will launch on Sky Documentaries and NOW TV in the summer.