Brit ISIS fanatics who had kids in warzones should be allowed to return to the UK, snowflake uni lecturer claims
BRITISH ISIS fanatics who have had kids in warzones should be allowed to return to the UK with their families, an academic has said.
Lecturer Katherine Brown also said Britain could deal with Islamisation better if they allowed students to take openly in "safe spaces", according to the reports.
The University of Birmingham lecturer in Islamic Studies made the comments earlier today while speaking at the Hay Festival about Muslim women and radicalisation,
She said removing citizenship from people who have gone to fight with the terror group was a "denial of responsibility".
"We have a responsibility for people who've done the things they've done.
"That means bringing them to justice and helping them as citizens."
Dr Brown added: "What about a Muslim woman who met a British man, what about their children? I think we have an obligation to those children."
She also that allowing IS fighters to return to the UK should be on a "case by case basis" while also "holding people accountable for their actions".
She also reportedly said Britain could deal better with the problems of Islamisation among young people by allowing them ‘safe spaces’ to talk openly, and said current anti-terror strategies stifled debate because teachers had a duty to report comments made in schools.
It is estimated there are 1,900 French citizens, and 40,000 foreigners who travelled to join ISIS's so-called caliphate in Iraq and Syria.
In May this year, dozens of foreign ISIS brides were sentenced to death in Iraq as the country exacts its revenge after three years of jihadi occupation.
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British housewife Sally Jones infamously fled Britain to join ISIS in 2013, before being killed in a US drone strike in 2017.
Jones was a former punk rocker turned jihadi bride who became known as “Mrs Terror” after marrying Junaid Hussain.
The 50-year-old mum-of-two was originally from Kent but fled to Syria, taking her son from a previous relationship with her and becoming known as "Umma Hussain al-Britani".
The CIA reported in October that Sally Jones was killed by a drone strike in Syria in June 2017.
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