In a quiet move, Britain has begun repatriating women and children linked to the Islamic State from Syrian camps, stirring emotions and raising questions.

05:20, Mon, Jan 26, 2026 Updated: 05:20, Mon, Jan 26, 2026

ISIS

Britain has quietly repatriated ISIS-linked women. Shamima Begum (pictured) is not yet one of them. (Image: Getty)

Britain has quietly repatriated Islamic State-linked women and children who were held alongside Shamima Begum in Syria, according to a director of the camp that holds the so-called Isis brides.

Six women in camps held by the western-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) have been sent back to Britain without fanfare  along with nine children. There have been concerns that Isis prisoners might escape in the chaos engulfing eastern Syria as the central authorities begin to reclaim territory from the Kurdish-led SDF, reports The Times.

Begum remains in camp as 29 Britons stay detained

However, the SDF remains in control of al-Roj camp near the Iraqi border, where Begum and the other British women were held. A camp official told The Times that 29 women and children who hold or held British passports remained in the camp, which is likely to be transferred to the authority of the Damascus government led by Ahmed al-Sharaa, the country's president.

Citizenship was stripped from Begum, one of three girls from Bethnal Green, east London, who travelled to Syria to join Isis in 2015 at the age of 15. The other two girls are both thought to have died in fighting between the western-led coalition and Isis jihadists.

After Begum was discovered by reporters in SDF detention in 2019, an outcry forced the then-Conservative government to declare she would not be allowed to return to Britain. The policy was applied to other women after the last Isis holdouts fell to the SDF.

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Minors returned under strict conditions of anonymity

Some unaccompanied minors were allowed to return to the UK and were handed to social services under conditions of anonymity. However, minors who were with their mothers were forced to remain in Syria.

The UK's official policy remains unchanged, but the Foreign Office has allowed a handful of women to return with their children on a case-by-case basis. Most of those repatriated have been women who were taken or travelled to Syria there when they were under 18.

In November, a report by the Independent Commission on Counter-Terrorism Law, Policy and Practice suggested that three adult women and 18 children had been repatriated, but there have only been public announcements regarding two women, one of whom returned in 2022 with her son and another woman with five children in 2023. It is understood that two more families returned in 2024 and 2025.

The government is preparing to resume deportations of foreign criminals and failed asylum seekers to Syria. The UK began voluntary returns after the fall of the Assad regime in December 2024. In November Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary, announced that the Home Office had begun exploring the possibility of enforced returns for the first time in 15 years.

The details about Begum and al-Roj camp were confirmed by its co-director, Rasheed Afrin. He said six UK women and nine children had been sent home in recent years.

Chaos as larger camp handed to Syrian military

The fate of the remaining women and children hangs in the balance after a larger camp was taken over by the Syrian military, which has launched an operation to end Kurdish autonomy in the northeast.

In al-Hawl, the larger camp, the handover was chaotic. The Kurdish SDF pulled out its troops as the army advanced, leading to riots and arson and dozens of the women escaping.

The US, which is debating withdrawing its forces from Syria, has brokered a deal to transfer male Isis prisoners to neighbouring Iraq.

Shamima Begum: Express visits former ISIS bride in Syria

Children raised on apocalyptic ISIS beliefs

Prisoners in the camps had languished under Kurdish guard for years after the demise of Isis's so-called caliphate. The caliphate was meant to endure and expand, as the Isis slogan goes, but in Syria it shrank to the two prison camps.

At al-Hawl, the women raised their children in tents on the apocalyptic beliefs of Isis. Children would chant that slogan at visitors as they pelted them with stones. Boys who reached puberty were forced into sex with women to produce more "lion cubs" for the caliphate that lay behind a flimsy wire fence.

Jihan Hanan, who was the director of al-Hawl until this week, said: "There were no preparations for the handover. I'm looking at the videos and pictures coming out and it burns my heart. The people inside, the international community's indifference. At the end of the day these are women and children."

The SDF had called on countries to repatriate their citizens, but most have refused. "Enough, the international community should say enough, this matter needs to be resolved," she said.

Hanan said the wives and children of the Isis members varied, from the ultra-fanatic to those who were sucked into the extremist group, or were born to parents who were.