She was convicted last Friday of being a member of Islamic State (IS) and encouraging terrorism on social media. She is believed to be the first woman to have gone on trial accused of joining the militants, media reports said.
Sentencing her to six years in prison, Judge Melbourne Inman said she had told lie after lie about her actions.
“The most abhorrent photographs … were those taken of your son wearing a balaclava with an ISIS logo and specifically the photograph of your son, no more than a toddler, standing next to an AK-47 under a title which translated from the Arabic means ‘Father of the British Jihad,’” Inman said.
The court heard she had published statements and pictures on Twitter in support of IS. A photograph uncovered by police showed her posing in Syria underneath an IS flag.
Police said it was not known why she left Syria in January 2015. She was arrested by counter-terrorism officers when she returned to Britain on Feb. 18 after landing at Heathrow Airport and her son was taken into care.
“However unclear the true picture is, I will assume in your favour that you decided to leave because you had a change of heart,” Inman said.
“That mitigation is very limited however because you pleaded not guilty and having seen you give evidence I saw no evidence of remorse about what you had done or done to your son.”
Security services estimate up to 800 people have travelled to Iraq and Syria, many to join Islamic State, and about half have returned home.
More about:






