UK police seek access to media material on Shamima Begum

The Metropolitan police are
attempting to gain access to unpublished material held by journalists who
interviewed Shamima Begum, one of the teenage girls who ran away from east
London to join Daesh in 2015, ahead of a potential prosecution.
Begum had her British citizenship
revoked earlier this year by the then home secretary, Sajid Javid, which left
her effectively stateless. Begum’s family is challenging the decision in the
courts.
The Times reporter Anthony Loyd was
the first journalist to track down Begum, and spent 90 minutes alone with her
in a Syrian refugee camp in February.
He interviewed her again after the
death of her baby son, and other major British broadcasters also recorded
interviews with her.
Begum, who married a Dutch Daesh
fighter, has said she regrets running away from Bethnal Green to join the
terrorist group, and wants to return home to the UK. Now believed to be 19
years old, she has had three children, all of whom have died.
The British government can revoke
citizenship as long as it does not leave people stateless.
The media traditionally opposes
police requests for material gathered for journalistic purposes, because it can
break agreements between reporters and interviewees.
The Met said officers would contact
media organizations “if they believe that they may have information or evidence
that could assist a criminal investigation.
“We fully respect the media’s
independence. The police will, when appropriate, seek a production order in
situations where that material is not provided voluntarily. The decision to
grant or deny the production order, quite properly, lies with the court.”
Shamima Begum's father has apologized
to the British public for his daughter's decision to join Daesh.
The British government can revoke
citizenship as long as it does not leave people stateless. Javid, who was
preparing for an ultimately unsuccessful attempt to become Conservative leader
when he took away her British passport, insisted his action was legal because
Begum’s parents were Bangladeshi nationals, which he said entitled her to a
passport from Bangladesh.