The families of t wo east London schoolgirls who fled to Syria to join
the Islamic State (IS) have lost hope that the teenagers will return
after discovering they have been married off to militants.
Police
launched an international manhunt for the three Bethnal Green Academy
pupils, Shamima Begum, 15, Kadiza Sultana, 16, and Amira Abase, 15,
after they fled Britain in February to become so-called "jihadi brides".
The families have confirmed that two of girls have since contacted them
to reveal their marriages to what the teenagers called "approved" IS
men.
Tasnime Akunjee, a solicitor representing the families, said they were grieving over the news that they had been dreading.
He
told the Guardian: "It has caused a lot of distress. It entrenches
their lives in Syria, rather than in Britain. It erodes significantly
hopes that they will come back."
The schoolgirls told their
families that they have been separated and are living apart in and
around Raqqa, Syria - an Isis stronghold.
The two schoolgirls,
who the families do not want to identify, married the older men in their
20s in a ceremony approved by Isis authorities after reportedly picking
their husbands from a catalogue of suitors.
The schoolgirls are
believed to have followed another 15-year-old girl who travelled to
Syria in December after becoming radicalised.
The news emerged
after a video was released online which reportedly showed the three
girls walking around Raqqa and carrying automatic rifles.
But Mr Akunjee said it was unlikely to be the girls.
"At
the time the video was shot, two of the girls are known to be married
and separated from their friends from east London," he told the
Guardian.
"The families think the video is unlikely to be them.
All three are living apart and those who are married are under the aegis
of their husbands and are unlikely to be under the aegis of some woman
leader."
Members of their girls' families, who appeared before a
committee of MPs in March, claimed they were normal teenagers who
watched shows including Keeping Up With The Kardashians.
Concerns about how Turkish authorities dealt with the disappearances were later raised by their families.
The Metropolitan Police believe around 600 Britons have travelled to
Syria and Iraq since the conflict began, and around half are believed to
have returned to the UK.
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