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Shamima Begum: IS bride says she was 'brainwashed' and wants 'a second chance'

The teen was found in a Syrian refugee camp in February after joining Islamic State

Shamima Begum talking to Sky News
Image: Shamima Begum talking to Sky News
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Shamima Begum has said she is now coming to terms with the prospect of never being allowed to return to the UK and insists she was "brainwashed" by Islamic State.

She is currently at Syrian refugee camp al Hawl, along with 1,555 other women and children who travelled from abroad to join the extremist group.

Her three-week-old son, Jarrah, died last month two days after being taken to hospital with breathing difficulties.

Speaking for the first time since the death of her third child, the 19-year-old from east London told The Times that she "really regretted everything" and wants "a second chance to start my life over again".

Kadiza Sultana (L), Shamima Begum (C) and Amira Abase going through Gatwick security before catching a flight to Turkey
Image: Kadiza Sultana (L), Shamima Begum (C) and Amira Abase left for Syria in 2015

She said she left for Syria four years ago, "believing everything that I had been told, while knowing little about the truths of my religion".

Shamima Begum was one of three schoolgirls, along with Kadiza Sultana and Amira Abase from Bethnal Green Academy in east London, who travelled together to Syria.

There, she married a Dutch fighter called Yago Riedijk, and the couple earlier this year fled the final IS stronghold of Baghouz in the east of the country where the caliphate was defeated by US-backed Kurdish-led forces.

More on Shamima Begum

The teen was stripped of her British citizenship in February as it was believed that she had dual-Bangladeshi citizenship.

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IS bride full interview: I was okay with beheadings

However this has since been disputed by the Bangladeshi government and she remains at the refugee camp, where her baby son is buried in an unmarked grave on the outskirts of the facility.

Shamima Begum said: "I have sat down and thought about how long I would have to stay here. And I have kind of accepted that I will have to stay here, I will have to make this like a second home."

Whilst she was in the late stages of pregnancy, she seemed to show little remorse for her actions. She said this was because of the threats she faced from extremists in the camp.

"Anything I said against Dawlah (IS), they would immediately attack me, so I was afraid of that," she said.

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Shamima Begum asks politicians for 'mercy'

When Sky News correspondent John Sparks spoke for a second time with Shamima Begum in mid-February, she claimed she was willing to change and be rehabilitated if the UK accepted her, despite previously saying she did not regret joining IS and that she was "okay" with beheadings.

Asked if she had anything to say to British politicians, Shamima Begum told Sparks: "I would like them to re-evaluate my case with a bit more mercy in their heart."

Last month, a lawyer representing her family said legal proceedings were under way to overturn Home Secretary Sajid Javid's decision to strip her of her British citizenship.

Mr Javid has insisted Shamima Begum will not be left "stateless" - something which is banned under international law.