Dure Ahmed in her apartment in Toronto after her return to the country.
She emphasized that Dure Ahmed had been immersed in the ideology of the armed group and that it was likely that she would have been aware of the role that her former husband played within the terrorist organization.
Ms. Ahmed will therefore have to commit to respecting the peace, observing a curfew from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. and wearing an electronic ankle bracelet.
She had already been wearing one since her first release, but it was changed for the purposes of the peace bond. peace linked to terrorism.
She cannot own any electronic devices other than a laptop, but her Internet access will be limited to 30 minutes per day, i.e. 15 minutes in the morning and 15 minutes in the afternoon.
Access to social networks is strictly prohibited and he is prohibited from consulting hateful or subversive literature online. She cannot possess a firearm, knives or explosives.
Open in full screen mode El Shafee Elsheikh in an interview with the Associated Press at the Kobani detention center in Syria in 2018.
She cannot leave Ontario without prior authorization from the RCMP and cannot possess any travel documents such as a passport or Nexus pass.
< p class="StyledBodyHtmlParagraph-sc-48221190-4 hNZoeU">She is not allowed to be around a long list of people whose names the court has cited to her or anyone with a criminal record in Canada.
The mother must also obtain consent from the RCMP before requesting social or medical services.
I accept all these conditions, she said at the end of the hearing.
In an exclusive interview with CBC and BBC, Dure Ahmed said that she had never been radicalized by her ex-partner, but that x27;she was just a stupid teenager in love.
She said in particular that she didn't like anything. was unaware of the atrocities he subsequently committed after arriving in Syria in 2012 from the UK.
At the time, El Shafee Elsheikh's group had beheaded Western hostages and released the videos on the Internet in 2014 and 2015.
In addition to the four Americans, two British aid workers, David Haines and Alan Henning, and two Japanese journalists, Haruna Yukawa and Kenji Goto, were massacred.
Open in full screen mode Al-Roj camp for women and children in Syria near the border with Turkey and Iraq.
Dure Ahmed had said that she had already left him when she x27;is arrested with his children in Raqqa, the capitalde facto of the Islamic State caliphate created in 2014.
She had been detained from 2019 to 2023 in a camp for the wives and children of alleged fighters of the armed group in the region recaptured by Kurdish forces.
She also said that her partner had changed when she found him in Syria, that he was no longer the introverted man she had known and that #x27;he had beaten her when she lived with him and his second wife.
She had claimed that her husband did not had never revealed that he had joined the armed group and that she knew nothing of the organization's murderous ideology upon arriving in Syria.
With some information from CBC's Ashley Burke.
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