Sharmeena Begum

Birth Year 1999

Birthplace Bethnal Green, Tower Hamlets, London, England

Age 25 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#55053 Most Popular

1999

Sharmeena Begum (born 1999) is a jihadi bride who left the United Kingdom to join the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in December 2014.

2007

She was raised by her mother until her father joined them in the UK in 2007.

2014

Begum's mother died of cancer in January 2014.

Her father remarried in September 2014, and Begum left for Syria in December of that year.

Begum's father said that her behaviour had changed; she stopped listening to Western music and began going to her room to pray, but he assumed that she was grieving about her mother's death.

At the time of her father's remarriage, she lived with her grandmother.

Members of Begum's family were certain that she was targeted for recruitment by a group known as the Sisters Forum within the Islamic Forum of Europe, which met at an east London mosque.

Women from the group that recruited her have been described as "brainwashing" her, telling her that she would meet her recently-deceased mother in paradise if she died a martyr, and reportedly brought her to the airport for her departure.

Sharmeena Begum was friends with Amira Abase, Shamima Begum (unrelated) and Kadiza Sultana, who left for Syria few months later.

All four attended Bethnal Green Academy.

Begum became increasingly interested in religious themes after her mother died, although her family had previously described her as non-religious.

She is said to have begun praying, and stopped listening to Western music.

Begum did not get along with her new stepmother, and had gone to live with one of her grandmothers.

According to police, she was encouraged by two unidentified women to join ISIL.

They brought Begum to Gatwick Airport for a flight to Turkey, from where she made her way to Syria.

According to reports by her family, she purchased the plane ticket with £500 that she persuaded her grandmother to give her.

Begum used her grandmother's passport for her travels, telling her that she needed to borrow the passport for her schoolwork.

The women who encouraged her are thought to be members of a group known as the Sisters Forum, part of the Islamic Forum of Europe.

The East London Mosque denied any involvement in Begum's radicalisation.

Two weeks after her departure, she reportedly called her father to tell him that she did not intend to return.

After his daughter's disappearance, Uddin told police about his suspicion that Begum might have been encouraged by Islamists and her three friends might also be at risk.

The Metropolitan Police subsequently approached the three girls to question them about their friend.

Since they were minors, they gave them letters to give to their parents to give permission for the questioning.

The letters were not passed along, and the police did not follow up.

Begum was joined two months after her departure by her three friends from Bethnal Green Academy, who had also made their way to Syria via Turkey.

They reportedly met in Raqqa.

Begum reportedly married a Bosnian fighter who was later killed.

2015

Two months later, in February 2015, her school friends Amira Abase, Shamima Begum, and Kadiza Sultana (who collectively became known as the Bethnal Green trio) joined her in occupied Syria.

Begum is one of the youngest British teenagers to join ISIL.

2018

Shamima Begum reported last seeing her in Baghuz in June 2018.

Jasmine Jawhar, author of Terrorists' use of the internet: The case of DAESH, said that Begum and her school friends were "mesmerised by the 'romantic idea of jihad.

Begum's travel to Islamic State-occupied Syria, followed by the travel of three of her friends, triggered a discussion of whether UK security officials could have prevented the other girls from following her example.

Parents of fellow students said that they were unaware that Begum had travelled to Islamic State territory.

Begum's father criticised the police for ignoring his concerns that her friends might follow her example.

2019

In February 2019, she was described as missing.

Begum was tracked down by the BBC in 2023, and is living in Syria under a different identity.

Begum was born to Shahnaz Begum and Mohammad Uddin, who are of Bangladeshi origin.

On 19 February 2019, Metropolitan Police commissioner Cressida Dick defended the police against claims that they should have been able to anticipate Begum's friends following her example.

Dick denied that Begum was travelling on the same plane as another teenage recruit who was prevented from travelling.

Acknowledging that another 15-year-old girl was prevented from travelling the night Begum left, she said she thought the other girl was on a different plane.