The son of Britain's Abu Hamza is reportedly trying to appeal the decision to revoke his British passport amid the furore of the case of Isil bride Shamima Begum.

Sufyan Mustafa, 23, was stripped of his UK passport in 2017 after travelling to Syria to fight with jihadists.

But at the end of last year he was said to have been stopped from boarding a flight to the UK from Turkey when his name was flagged as being on the terror watch list.

Now, a source told The Sun he is trying to overturn the Home Office decision to take away his British citizenship.

The insider told the paper Mustafa has been told he can travel to Morocco, but that he doesn't want to.

International law forbids nations from making people stateless by revoking their only citizenship, but the Home Office in 2017 knew Abu Hamza's ninth child had dual nationality through his Moroccan heritage.

When he had his British passport revoked Mustafa, 23, whose father is in jail in the US after being convicted of a series of terrorism charges, complained in an interview with an Arabic newspaper of his plight.

He had previously pleaded for the option of coming back to his home in west London.