Alabama woman who joined Isis is not US citizen, judge rules

A judge sided with the Trump administration on
Thursday in ruling that an Alabama woman who joined the Islamic State group was
not a US citizen, leaving the 25-year-old and her son in limbo in Syria.
Hoda Muthana, an American-born woman who left
Alabama to join Isis in 2014, has said she “deeply regrets” joining the
terrorist group and wants to return to the US with her young son.
Reggie Walton, a federal judge in Washington, agreed
with the government’s position that Muthana’s father was still a diplomat when
she was born, making her ineligible for US citizenship, a lawyer for Muthana
said.
The lawyer, Christina Jump, said she was waiting to
read the written ruling and that the Constitutional Law Center for Muslims in
America, which is representing Muthana, would look at further options.
The US grants citizenship to virtually everyone born
on its soil and it is extremely difficult to revoke a person’s citizenship.
But as Muthana’s case grew in prominence, Trump
tweeted that Muthana was not a US citizen and would not be allowed to return.
The US secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, later
explained that Muthana’s father had been a diplomat representing Yemen at the
UN, meaning that his daughter was never a US citizen even though she traveled
to Syria on a US passport – which she appeared to torch in a propaganda
message.
Muthana’s lawyer stressed that the judge based his
ruling on the issue of diplomatic immunity.
“The court did not base its ruling on a tweet by the
president, or by any supposed proclamation made by any official,” Lamb said.
“United States citizenship cannot be revoked by
tweet or any other form of social media, and today’s ruling does not change
that,” she said.
Muthana was raised in Hoover, Alabama, a prosperous
suburb of Birmingham, and says she was brainwashed through her smartphone by
messages from Isis.
In Syria, she reached out to a global jihadist
audience through social media and married three foreign fighters, all of whom
died in combat.
Muthana says she has reformed and is willing to face
prosecution in the US, where she wants to return for the sake of her
two-year-old son.
“Anyone that believes in God believes that everyone
deserves a second chance, no matter how harmful their sins were,” Muthana told
NBC News in a recent interview from her displacement camp.
“I did not support the [Isis] beheadings from day
one, until now I do not support any of their crimes and suicide attacks,”
Muthana said.
The US has repatriated several Americans but not
Muthana.
The court case comes as the US struggles to persuade
European allies – who can more easily legally revoke citizenship – to
repatriate their fighters from Syria.