7.1 C
New York
Sunday, November 24, 2024
HomeUK NewsBBC defends Shamima Begum documentary

BBC defends Shamima Begum documentary

Date:

Related stories

Manhunt underway for husband after murder of Harshitha Brella in east London

Police are searching for Pankaj Lamba, who is suspected...

London mayor Sadiq Khan criticizes Trump’s policies as divisive and prejudiced

London Mayor Sadiq Khan has condemned U.S. president-elect Donald...

Starmer attends Armistice Day in Paris, first UK PM to participate since Churchill

In a historic move, Prime Minister Keir Starmer attended...

Badenoch appoints Priti Patel and Mel Stride to lead Tory shadow cabinet

Opening Paragraph: Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch has appointed Mel...

Reeves to prioritize NHS with significant funding boost in budget

Chancellor Rachel Reeves is set to announce billions of...

THE BBC has defended a documentary about Londoner Shamima Begum, who left Britain to join Daesh (Islamic State group), saying the series was a piece of important investigative journalism.

A 10-part series, entitled The Shamima Begum Story, features interviews with Begum, who explains her decision to join Daesh, as well as discussions about radicalisation in the UK and national security issues.

However, the corporation received 387 complaints from viewers who said it was unsuitable to feature a podcast and television documentary about Begum.

The BBC emphasised that the documentary featured testimony from those impacted by Deash, and that the filmmaker, Josh Baker, asked “key editorial questions about how she (Begum) got to Islamic State Group territory in Syria, what she did when she got there, and the consequences of her actions”.

The BBC has encouraged people to listen to and watch the documentary in full and said the series was an important contribution to public discourse on national security, radicalisation, and the consequences of joining extremist groups.

- Advertisement -

Begum, who lost her appeal against the UK government’s decision to revoke her citizenship, has been living in a camp in northern Syria since 2019. The decision to revoke her citizenship was upheld in a UK court earlier this week, meaning that she will remain in the camp indefinitely.

In 2015, Begum, who is now 23 years old and originally from east London, travelled to Syria to join Daesh along with two of her school friends. It later emerged that she had married a Daesh fighter and had three children, all of whom died.

After several years, Begum reappeared in 2019 in a refugee camp.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories