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'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

 
[Social News]     21 Apr 2019
When it comes to the ISIS terrorist group, most people are subconsciously away from it. After all, no one wants to be associated with terrorist.

When it comes to the ISIS terrorist group, most people are subconsciously away from it. After all, no one wants to be associated with terrorist.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

However, not all people think so, some bold, big heart. Around the world, there are always people who choose leave`s own country, join the organization, and be beaten on the face because they regret joining.

In 2014, an Australian man, Khaled Sharrouf, took his family to Syria to join ISIS.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Khaled Sharrouf


"this is my good son," Khaled wrote in a social post in 2015.

The boy in the picture holds the head of a man who has just been cut off. See this scene, are you as shivering as your internet friends.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

So far, Khaled and his wife, as well as the head-carrying son and their other child, have been killed in the fighting.

Only two daughters and one son, all orphaned, are now in refugee camp.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

The 17-year-old daughter, Zaynab, was forced by his father to marry an Australian member of the ISIS group and gave birth to two children, and is now seven and a half months pregnant.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Although she has been in ISIS`s savage violence environment, Zaynab says if they return to Australia, she and her siblings will never take any risks and live a good life.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

I just want leave here. I always wanted to go home, I had no choice to be brought here by the parents, their sins should not be borne by the children. And now they`re all gone, and I hope we can get back to normal.

For me and my children, I want to live a normal life, just as anyone wants a normal life.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?
'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Another daughter, Hoda, also said:

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

I don`t know. Do I have a right to a normal life? The last five years have been tough, and I wanted to get leave early, but I was never allowed, and when my mom told us I was in Syria, I was crying, and I was screaming to go home. But it`s easy to get in here, too hard to get out of here. Once in, you can`t get out.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?
'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

During this time, Hoda also tried to contact his grandmother several times, hoping that her grandmother would help them to come home. But the first two failed, and their grandfather is now trying to help for a third time.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

In 2015, their father, Khaled, was reported to have captured women as their "babysitters" to help take care of children and other chores.

Through contact, there are "babysitters" that the children are not so simple, or even learn bad.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

The children also used to threat us, saying that we believed differently and wanted to decapitate us and record the process on our cell phones.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?
'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Their grandmother has turned to Australian authorities for help, and although Australian Prime Minister Morrison has also expressed sympathy for the children, he has also made it clear that Australia does not accept people from Syria.

Opposition party leader Bill Shorten says he is willing to help the children if he becomes prime minister.

And after joining ISIS in this way, "hit oneself in the face" example, in the world is not a few.


01. A 19-year-old woman in Britain wants to return home to have a child after she is pregnant.

A 19-year-old girl named Begum (Shamima Begum) caught the attention of the British media by saying, "I want to have a baby in the UK now," in a minute that caused panic on the part of the onlookers. Because she also said: "I`m in ISIS, I`m not going home again!"

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

In December 2014, a 15-year-old British girl, Shamina, suddenly ran away with her passport and £1000.

When her family found out that it was too late to call the police and find out where she was, the little girl had already flown to the Turkish capital alone and then went to Syria alone.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Shamina.


Two weeks after Shamina`s family first received information about her, the little girl told her father on the phone, "I`m in ISIS, and I`m not going home again!"

Shamina became the youngest member of the ISIS terrorist group to be identified as the youngest British member, causing a stir in British society.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Route to Syria


A 15-year-old good girl, how to be fooled by ISIS?!

During the investigation, the police found that Shamina`s departure was closely related to terrorist`s online propaganda. Shamina inadvertently came into contact with extremist`s comments on the network and was successfully brainwashing. He taught himself the Arab language and secretly saved money to go to ISIS..

When Shamina`s family tried to persuade her to go home, no one thought that three more girls had disappeared in early 2015.

It was Shamina`s three best friends who ran away this time, including Begum, whom we mentioned at the beginning.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Three students who perform well in the school, in the association with good friends Shamina, unexpectedly have been brainwashing became a follower of ISIS, quietly with their own passports ran away! 3 students who have performed well in school all A, in association with friends Shamina, unexpectedly have become ISIS followers, quietly with their own passport away!

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Their destination was also Syria, where four girls finally met in ISIS`s "Women`s House" to become "jihadi brides" and soon married "ISIS fighters" of different nationalities.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

It was not until recently that The Times`s journalist stumbled upon Begum in refugee camp in northern Syria that four British girls who went to ISIS were remembered by the British public.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Begum and her husband.


Her husband, Yago Riedijk, a Dutchman who joined the ISIS terrorist group, has lost contact with him during the war and is taking his children away from refugee camp in northern Syria alone.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

As for the other three girls, one of them was killed in an air strike in 2016, and two others are still missing.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

In just four years, Begum has become the mother of three children, and two children have died. Last weekend, she gave birth to a baby boy, but she says her newborn son is in poor health and camp refugee is in poor condition. Supplies are too tight to take good care of the children.

In order for his children to grow up in a safe environment, Begum sent a request to Britain`s government to return to the UK.


02. Life in Camp refugee is worse than thought.

In the tough refugee camp, Begum spoke to journalist. At the age of 19, she looked very tired, but the whole communication showed unusual calm.

When journalist asked Begum if she was aware of ISIS`s terrorist acts, she did not think it was wrong to have beheaded executions and other terrorist acts.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?
'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Faced with the camera, Bergham bluntly said she wanted to return to the UK in the hope of providing a safe environment for her children, but she did not regret her choice to go to the ISIS.

"I think everyone should sympathize with me."

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?
'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?
'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?
'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Speaking of ideas for the future, Begum did not want to stay at Camp refugee for a long time. She found the conditions too difficult to bear.

If Britain can let her go back, she feels the future is still full of hope.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?
'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?
'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?
'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

In response to Begum`s request, Alex Younger, head of MI6, the British intelligence agency, saw no reason to refuse.

But the British Home Secretary, Sajid Javid, has always been adamant. He published an article in the newspaper entitled "if you go to ISIS, like Begum, I will try my best to stop you from returning home." he opposes such a return request.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Eventually, Begum was British government deprive British nationality. But given that Begum`s mother is Bangladeshi, she might be able to return to the UK as a foreigner if she had dual citizenship on law.

Bengal government responded on Feb. 20 that although Begum`s mother was Bangladeshi, Begum was not, and Bangladesh would not recognize her nationality.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?


03, in the "ISIS" organization, the adult world is even more terrifying.

ISIS, known as "ISIS," has been classified as a terrorist organization by many countries for beheading prisoners and civilians, including journalist, and making videos widely available.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

In addition to cruelty, ISIS will also use the Internet as a means of communication to induce Western youth to participate in "jihad" in the Middle East in the name of religion; women will be arranged to become "maiden brides", or even reduced to sex slave.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

In civilized society, ISIS`s atrocity is not a day or two. They kill fighters, civilians, and "pagans" for so-called beliefs. Countless cruel ways of killing are creepy.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Egyptian television had revealed that ISIS had Yazdi sex slave eat her own one-year-old without knowing it.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Then there were media reports that ISIS killed a 10-year-old girl in front of her family, rape.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

The 42-year-old Hamilton man, who has joined the ISIS for five years, is on the government`s global terrorist blacklist.

He volunteered to join ISIS, declared publicly on the Internet that he had burned New Zealand passports, encouraged New Zealanders to launch a "jihad" on Anzac Day, and threatened not to return home until the jihad was completed. He was also slapped in the face by himself.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

, Mark Taylor was arrested in Syria after trying to escape from a terrorist group, and is being held in a Kurdish-controlled prison, which is ISIS`s rival, according to media reports.

The ISIS terrorist group was, in fact, at the end of the crossfire, driven back to a small remnant of Baghouz in eastern Syria, and constantly attacked by United States support forces.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Taylor says he surrendered on his own initiative because ISIS is so poor that he has no food, no money, and no basic means of living.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Surprisingly, Taylor says his biggest regret is that he can`t afford "sex slave."

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Thousands of Yazdi women and girls have been taken away by ISIS as sex slave, ISIS says these people are "pagans" and should be rape.

"it costs at least $4000 to buy an sex slave," he said. "it`s a old woman. at least 50 years old. To buy a better one, it costs at least $10, 000 or $20, 000. "

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Taylor said he married two Syrian women, but neither of them lasted.

"I can only make a final decision. That`s leave."

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

Where are you going? He thought of his native country, New Zealand.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

I`m sorry to have caused too much trouble, a little reckless and boastful. I don`t know if I can go back to New Zealand, but in the end, it`s something I have to deal with for the rest of my life.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

But he knew he might go to jail. He emphasized that he had not killed anyone, that he had been a guard for five years, that he had only witnessed other people being decapitated. He thought he would be surprised if New Zealand did not accept him.

'it's not my fault my parents brought me into ISIS,!' They want to go home. Should Australia accept it?

///

What kind of "faith" does it take to make such a dehumanizing act of terror?!

In recent years, the terrorist attacks created by ISIS around the world have forced countless originally beautiful families to tear apart and bear many inexplicable sufferings. Who will pay for the crimes left behind by the fire of war and the chaos?.

And who can those innocent people who suffer from ISIS persecution seek for help?

Some roads are doomed to no turning back.

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