An undated handout photo released by West Midlands Police service and received in London on January 29, 2016, shows Tareena Shakil as she poses for a custody photograph with a head scarf. (AFP Photo / West Midlands Police)
London, United Kingdom:
A mother who took her toddler to Syria and joined ISIS group was sentenced to six years in prison today after becoming the first British woman to be convicted after returning home.
Tareena Shakil, 26, was found guilty by a court in Birmingham, central England of ISIS membership and encouraging terrorism in posts on Twitter before leaving Britain.
"You were well aware that the future which you had subjected your son to was very likely to be indoctrination and thereafter life as a terrorist fighter," Judge Melbourne Inman said.
The court heard that Shakil was radicalised online and in October 2014 told her family she was going to Turkey for a beach holiday.
Instead, she crossed the border into Syria and went to IS stronghold Raqa.
"I left to build us all a house in heaven, Allah promised us heaven if we sacrifice our worldly life," she wrote in a message to a relative. "I'm not coming back."
In Raqa, she was kept in a large house with other single women and posed with her son for a selfie while wearing a black balaclava branded with the ISIS symbol.
Other pictures found on her phone showed her posing with an AK-47 assault rifle and a handgun.
However, Shakil found life under ISIS rules too strict.
In January 2015, after repeatedly looking up "I want to leave ISIS" on the Internet, she and her son travelled by road to the Turkish border.
They ran one kilometre (about half a mile) to escape into Turkey, dodging a three-man ISIS patrol before handing themselves in to the Turkish military, she told the court.
She was arrested when police boarded her flight home at London's Heathrow Airport last February.
During her trial, Shakil claimed she only travelled to Syria because she wanted to live under sharia law.
Tareena Shakil, 26, was found guilty by a court in Birmingham, central England of ISIS membership and encouraging terrorism in posts on Twitter before leaving Britain.
"You were well aware that the future which you had subjected your son to was very likely to be indoctrination and thereafter life as a terrorist fighter," Judge Melbourne Inman said.
The court heard that Shakil was radicalised online and in October 2014 told her family she was going to Turkey for a beach holiday.
Instead, she crossed the border into Syria and went to IS stronghold Raqa.
"I left to build us all a house in heaven, Allah promised us heaven if we sacrifice our worldly life," she wrote in a message to a relative. "I'm not coming back."
In Raqa, she was kept in a large house with other single women and posed with her son for a selfie while wearing a black balaclava branded with the ISIS symbol.
Other pictures found on her phone showed her posing with an AK-47 assault rifle and a handgun.
However, Shakil found life under ISIS rules too strict.
In January 2015, after repeatedly looking up "I want to leave ISIS" on the Internet, she and her son travelled by road to the Turkish border.
They ran one kilometre (about half a mile) to escape into Turkey, dodging a three-man ISIS patrol before handing themselves in to the Turkish military, she told the court.
She was arrested when police boarded her flight home at London's Heathrow Airport last February.
During her trial, Shakil claimed she only travelled to Syria because she wanted to live under sharia law.
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