Travel bans issued for 5 British girls attending same school as runaway ISIS trio
A London court has issued travel bans for five teenage girls who study at the same school once attended by the three girls who fled England last month to join Islamic State fighters.
The family division of the High Court in London issued the bans last week, declaring the teens wards of the court in order to prevent them from running off to Syria.
READ MORE: 3 British teenagers aiming to join ISIS in Syria detained in Turkey, sent back
An application for the travel bans was filed by social services
in the London borough of Tower Hamlets after the girls reportedly
showed an interest in moving to Syria following the
disappearances of Kadiza Sultana, 16, and 15-year-olds Shamima
Begum and Amira Abase.
The five girls, whose names are not being released, are now
barred from traveling abroad without a judge’s permission. The
judge removed a previous order which forbade identification of
the school, after the Press Association news agency argued that
it would be “in the public interest” to reveal that the eight
girls attended the same school – Bethnal Green Academy in East
London.
Barristers for Tower Hamlets Council and the Metropolitan Police
argued that naming the school would risk revealing the teens’
identities.
A spokesperson for Tower Hamlets Council said: “We welcome
the judge’s ruling to uphold the original decision to confiscate
the pupil’s passports for their own safety. Keeping children safe
is our highest priority.”
Bethnal Green Academy said it barred access to social media on
its campus and that radicalization did not occur within the
school's walls.
READ MORE: Britain at ‘cliff edge’ as ISIS recruitment rises, must offer ‘counter-narrative’ – MPs
Islamic State extremists have been conducting a successful recruitment campaign, luring young people of both genders to Syria and Iraq.
Last Friday, three teenage girls were detained in Austria after
making plans to leave for Syria where they intended to marry
Islamic State militants. They had made contact with
representatives of the Sunni extremist group via Skype and other
social networks.
British MPs warned earlier this week that the country is on
“cliff edge” as more men, women and children prepare to flee to
Syria and Iraq to join the Islamic State under the influence of
the group’s aggressive social media operation.