Shamima Begum, then 15, was one of three teenage girls reported missing from an east London neighborhood in 2015 after they allegedly fled to join ISIS. By 2019, Begum was in a Syrian refugee camp trying to find her way back to the UK, however, the British Home Office refused her entry and stripped her of her citizenship, citing security risks. Unable to return home, the BBC reports, she is still being held in a detention camp in northeastern Syria. Now, information gathered by international law enforcement and intelligence agencies implicates Mohammed Al Rashid in smuggling Begum and other British citizens into Islamic State territory while working as an intelligence agent for Canada. According to documents obtained by the BBC, Rasheed went to the Canadian Embassy in Jordan to try to apply for asylum in 2013 and was told he would be granted Canadian citizenship if he agreed to collect information on ISIS activities. He then began helping people enter IS territory in Syria from Turkey while sharing their information with Canadian intelligence. He operated as part of an ISIS people-smuggling network for about eight months before allegedly helping Begum enter Syria, the BBC reports. He was arrested in Turkey days later. In light of these allegations, Tasnime Akunjee, a lawyer for Begum’s family, told the BBC that the family plans to challenge the removal of her citizenship on the grounds that the British government did not recognize her as a victim of human trafficking when it revoked her citizenship her. . “The UK has international obligations in terms of how we view a person who has been trafficked and what culpability we attribute to them for their actions,” he told the BBC. Akunjee said he was shocked that a Canadian intelligence element was part of the smuggling operation. “Someone who is supposed to be an ally is protecting our people, instead of trafficking British children into a war zone,” he told the BBC. “Collecting information appears to have been prioritized over children’s lives.” At a news conference Tuesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said that while Canada’s intelligence agencies must be “flexible” and “creative” in their fight against terrorism, they are bound by strict rules. “There are rigorous oversight mechanisms with the necessary clearances to look at the operations and decisions made by intelligence agencies in their work to keep Canada and Canadians safe in a very dangerous world,” he told reporters. “I know there are questions about some past incidents or operations and we will make sure to follow up on that.”


title: “Shamima Begum Smuggled To Syria By Canadian Spy Documents Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-11-20” author: “Randy Swartz”


Shamima Begum, then 15, was one of three teenage girls reported missing from an east London neighborhood in 2015 after they allegedly fled to join ISIS. By 2019, Begum was in a Syrian refugee camp trying to find her way back to the UK, however, the British Home Office refused her entry and stripped her of her citizenship, citing security risks. Unable to return home, the BBC reports, she is still being held in a detention camp in northeastern Syria. Now, information gathered by international law enforcement and intelligence agencies implicates Mohammed Al Rashid in smuggling Begum and other British citizens into Islamic State territory while working as an intelligence agent for Canada. According to documents obtained by the BBC, Rasheed went to the Canadian Embassy in Jordan to try to apply for asylum in 2013 and was told he would be granted Canadian citizenship if he agreed to collect information on ISIS activities. He then began helping people enter IS territory in Syria from Turkey while sharing their information with Canadian intelligence. He operated as part of an ISIS people-smuggling network for about eight months before allegedly helping Begum enter Syria, the BBC reports. He was arrested in Turkey days later. In light of these allegations, Tasnime Akunjee, a lawyer for Begum’s family, told the BBC that the family plans to challenge the removal of her citizenship on the grounds that the British government did not recognize her as a victim of human trafficking when it revoked her citizenship her. . “The UK has international obligations in terms of how we view a person who has been trafficked and what culpability we attribute to them for their actions,” he told the BBC. Akunjee said he was shocked that a Canadian intelligence element was part of the smuggling operation. “Someone who is supposed to be an ally is protecting our people, instead of trafficking British children into a war zone,” he told the BBC. “Collecting information appears to have been prioritized over children’s lives.” At a news conference Tuesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said that while Canada’s intelligence agencies must be “flexible” and “creative” in their fight against terrorism, they are bound by strict rules. “There are rigorous oversight mechanisms with the necessary clearances to look at the operations and decisions made by intelligence agencies in their work to keep Canada and Canadians safe in a very dangerous world,” he told reporters. “I know there are questions about some past incidents or operations and we will make sure to follow up on that.”


title: “Shamima Begum Smuggled To Syria By Canadian Spy Documents Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-11-16” author: “Elmer Mccrory”


Shamima Begum, then 15, was one of three teenage girls reported missing from an east London neighborhood in 2015 after they allegedly fled to join ISIS. By 2019, Begum was in a Syrian refugee camp trying to find her way back to the UK, however, the British Home Office refused her entry and stripped her of her citizenship, citing security risks. Unable to return home, the BBC reports, she is still being held in a detention camp in northeastern Syria. Now, information gathered by international law enforcement and intelligence agencies implicates Mohammed Al Rashid in smuggling Begum and other British citizens into Islamic State territory while working as an intelligence agent for Canada. According to documents obtained by the BBC, Rasheed went to the Canadian Embassy in Jordan to try to apply for asylum in 2013 and was told he would be granted Canadian citizenship if he agreed to collect information on ISIS activities. He then began helping people enter IS territory in Syria from Turkey while sharing their information with Canadian intelligence. He operated as part of an ISIS people-smuggling network for about eight months before allegedly helping Begum enter Syria, the BBC reports. He was arrested in Turkey days later. In light of these allegations, Tasnime Akunjee, a lawyer for Begum’s family, told the BBC that the family plans to challenge the removal of her citizenship on the grounds that the British government did not recognize her as a victim of human trafficking when it revoked her citizenship her. . “The UK has international obligations in terms of how we view a person who has been trafficked and what culpability we attribute to them for their actions,” he told the BBC. Akunjee said he was shocked that a Canadian intelligence element was part of the smuggling operation. “Someone who is supposed to be an ally is protecting our people, instead of trafficking British children into a war zone,” he told the BBC. “Collecting information appears to have been prioritized over children’s lives.” At a news conference Tuesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said that while Canada’s intelligence agencies must be “flexible” and “creative” in their fight against terrorism, they are bound by strict rules. “There are rigorous oversight mechanisms with the necessary clearances to look at the operations and decisions made by intelligence agencies in their work to keep Canada and Canadians safe in a very dangerous world,” he told reporters. “I know there are questions about some past incidents or operations and we will make sure to follow up on that.”


title: “Shamima Begum Smuggled To Syria By Canadian Spy Documents Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-11-15” author: “Ruby Davis”


Shamima Begum, then 15, was one of three teenage girls reported missing from an east London neighborhood in 2015 after they allegedly fled to join ISIS. By 2019, Begum was in a Syrian refugee camp trying to find her way back to the UK, however, the British Home Office refused her entry and stripped her of her citizenship, citing security risks. Unable to return home, the BBC reports, she is still being held in a detention camp in northeastern Syria. Now, information gathered by international law enforcement and intelligence agencies implicates Mohammed Al Rashid in smuggling Begum and other British citizens into Islamic State territory while working as an intelligence agent for Canada. According to documents obtained by the BBC, Rasheed went to the Canadian Embassy in Jordan to try to apply for asylum in 2013 and was told he would be granted Canadian citizenship if he agreed to collect information on ISIS activities. He then began helping people enter IS territory in Syria from Turkey while sharing their information with Canadian intelligence. He operated as part of an ISIS people-smuggling network for about eight months before allegedly helping Begum enter Syria, the BBC reports. He was arrested in Turkey days later. In light of these allegations, Tasnime Akunjee, a lawyer for Begum’s family, told the BBC that the family plans to challenge the removal of her citizenship on the grounds that the British government did not recognize her as a victim of human trafficking when it revoked her citizenship her. . “The UK has international obligations in terms of how we view a person who has been trafficked and what culpability we attribute to them for their actions,” he told the BBC. Akunjee said he was shocked that a Canadian intelligence element was part of the smuggling operation. “Someone who is supposed to be an ally is protecting our people, instead of trafficking British children into a war zone,” he told the BBC. “Collecting information appears to have been prioritized over children’s lives.” At a news conference Tuesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said that while Canada’s intelligence agencies must be “flexible” and “creative” in their fight against terrorism, they are bound by strict rules. “There are rigorous oversight mechanisms with the necessary clearances to look at the operations and decisions made by intelligence agencies in their work to keep Canada and Canadians safe in a very dangerous world,” he told reporters. “I know there are questions about some past incidents or operations and we will make sure to follow up on that.”