Where can I watch the return life after ISIS documentary?
The 2021 Sky Documentaries film is available to watch on demand courtesy of Sky and the NOW streaming service.
Is Sabaya a true story?
Sabaya is a real-life thriller. You don’t know what’s ahead when the lights of a car appear at night, or who’s in that car that trails the men after they’ve found some Yazidi women.
Who is Tareena Shakil?
A woman convicted of travelling to Syria to join the Islamic State group says she “regrets everything” about it. Tareena Shakil, from Birmingham, was jailed in 2016 when she returned to the UK after three months with IS. The 32-year-old said she was “ashamed” of her actions and “lives with the consequences every day”.
Where is Shamima Begum’s husband?
He has been convicted in the Netherlands for joining Isis and faces a six-year jail term if he returns to Europe. Begum, now 22, is detained in a Kurdish-run facility. She spent nearly four years with the terrorist regime before she was found by The Times in a refugee camp in February 2019.
Where can I watch the return life after Isis in Canada?
CBC Gem
Available on CBC Gem Now, after the fall of ISIS, they are among hundreds of Western women and children being held in detention camps in northern Syria, unable to return home.
Where can I see 76 days?
Currently you are able to watch “76 Days” streaming on Paramount Plus, Paramount+ Amazon Channel.
What is the movie Sabaya about?
In August 2014, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (Daesh) attacked the ancestral homeland of the Yazidis, one of the oldest ethnic and religious minorities in Iraq. Among many atrocities Daesh committed was the abduction of thousands of women and girls, who were passed on as sex slaves (sabaya) among the jihadists.Sabaya / Film synopsis
Where IS Tareena Shakil from?
Birmingham
Tareena Shakil, from Birmingham, travelled to Raqqa back in 2014 with her one-year-old son and lived in a house with dozens of other women as they prepared to marry foreign fighters.
What nationality is Tareena Shakil?
British
That’s what Tareena Shakil, the first British woman to be prosecuted and convicted for joining the Islamic State, tells filmmaker Abigail Carr in Shakil’s first interview since a British jury convicted her of joining ISIS and encouraging terrorism in 2016.