ISIS warning: 100 British children born to ISIS brides in Syria may try to RETURN to UK

Home Secretary Sajid Javid removed Shamima Begum’s passport last week. But Mr Javid has been forced to concede that her son Jarrah, who is just one week old, is a British citizen and has every right to come back to the UK. The Soufan Centre, a counter-terrorism research organisation based in the US, estimates that there are as at least 700 children born to foreign jihadis still in war torn Syria.

A paper published by the organisation warned Western countries must have a strategy to deal with the children if they do return ‘home’.

They said: “The physical territory of the caliphate is gone, but its core ideology has already been implanted in countless young and impressionable children.

“Countries need to craft a comprehensive strategy for dealing with those children who will return to their parents’ countries of origin,” the paper warned.

Around 150 British girls and women are said to have travelled to Syria to join ISIS as the terror cult gained control in the region.

And the majority of them are understood to have married and had children.

A worrying 50 children were taken to the war zone by their parents, however, around a quarter are believed to have been killed.

Many children have been forced to witness horrific acts of violence which include executions and beheading.

Two things Shamima Begum claimed she “wasn’t bothered by”.

Some of the older children have been forced to partake in the killings.

The large number of British children in ISIS territory will cause headaches for the Government who have said ISIS sympathisers with dual nationality will be stripped of their British citizenship.

Begum, who joined the sick terrorist group in 2014, when she was just a 15-year-old child has had two husbands and three children.

Two of which have died because of malnutrition and disease.

Reema Iqbal, from London, who spent four years married to a sadistic jihadi who said he “slaughtering infidels like sheep” has also given birth in Syria.

Iqbal has spent the last year in a detention camp in northeast Syria with hundreds of other jihadists.

However, she wants to return to Britain with her two kids.

Salma Haldane, one of the so called terror twins, who left Manchester when they were 16, has also married a terrorist and given birth to a boy.

source: express.co.uk