Shamima Begum and the Legality of Removing Citizenship from an ISIS Member

On both sides of the Atlantic, authorities are grappling with what to do with people linked to Islamic State (ISIS) returning home from the war in Syria.

President Donald Trump has said Hoda Muthana, who left the U.S. to become a propagandist for ISIS, “is not a U.S. citizen and will not be admitted into the United States“, while Shamima Begum, who left London four years ago with two friends to join up with ISIS in Syria, has been stripped of her U.K. citizenship.

Other foreign citizens who fought for ISIS are facing justice in their home countries. The British government has prosecuted at least 40 people who have returned to the U.K. having fought in Iraq or Syria. On Feb. 16, Trump called on Britain, France, Germany and other European allies “to take back over 800 Isis fighters that we captured in Syria and put them on trial.”

Begum and Muthana were not combatants, but each pledged allegiance to ISIS. And for now at least, they will not be allowed back to what they consider their home countries. Their cases have raised some difficult questions: What does it mean to be a citizen of Britain or the U.S.? And how easily can that citizenship be removed? Here, we try to explain:

What does it mean to be “stateless”?

To not be a legal citizen of any country. Despite the Universal Declaration of Human Rights affirming that “everyone has the right to a nationality,” the U.N. estimates there are roughly 12 million people around the world who are not considered as a national by any state under the operation of its law,

What this means in practice, for example, is that if Begum’s human rights were violated in Syria, there would be no state that would be able to take up her claim or protect her.

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