Shamima Begum, a former ISIS bride, has called for the British public to forgive her and claims that there is no evidence she was a key player in preparing terrorist acts. She has revealed that beheading videos were a factor which inspired the deaths of several hostages, most of whom were beheaded, and filmed the killings and posted the videos on social media. The Supreme Court has ruled that Shamima Begum will not be allowed to return to the UK in order to fight her citizenship case. She believes that ISIS did not deserve victory and that people who were children when they went to align with ISIS should be considered first and foremost as victims.
ISIS’s beheading videos have had a substantial impact on American and British foreign policy, prompting columnists and journalists to speculate whether the United States and United Kingdom would have carried out anything more than pinprick strikes within Iraq and Syria without the broadcast beheadings. Beheading has a long history and might have a long future, and it has a long history of being one of humanity’s worst execution methods.
Begum’s case raised the profile of Muslim women who had voluntarily left their home countries to join the Islamic State and were now involved in the group. The Supreme Court has ruled that Shamima Begum will not be allowed to return to the UK in order to fight her citizenship case.
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