A British ISIS teen has been stripped of her British citizenship after showing no remorse for joining the terror group.

OPINION

The clutch of women attempting to weep their way, baby in arms, back from the Islamic State disaster should not be given second chances.

They made their choices and cannot claim to have been ignorant of what the fanatics they rushed to join were up to.

They made a bad choice that amounted to siding with a regime of intolerance, destruction, primitive thought and murderous strategy. And not all of them have condemned their former hosts.

When American Hoda Muthana jumped the Turkish border in 2015 to eventually meet the IS fighters — three of whom she would marry — the extremists were not coy about their record.

That was the year in which IS proudly revealed it had beheaded a Japanese hostage, burned alive a Jordanian pilot in a cage, and murdered an American captive. And it saw the perverted destruction of ancient buildings in the city of Palmyra.

This was the year the Islamic State slaughters shocked the world, although not Hoda Muthana, who was 21 in 2015. She signed on for the blood-soaked journey and actively, publicly supported it.

But now the so-called caliphate has crashed and burned in Syria and the extremists’ dream of a takeover has crumbled, she wants to come back to Alabama. As do others in Syrian refugee camps.

She is one of a number of women who left the West for the IS caravan, and who worked the brutal path set by their new husbands, and have decided they now should be allowed back home and given a consequence-free welcome.

Shamima Begum was just 15 in 2015 when she left London for Syria and IS. She now wants back and admits she would pack her warped religious views in her luggage.

She had no regrets over her adventure in Syria even though she lost two children to malnutrition, and gave birth to a third at the weekend.

“When I saw my first severed head in a bin it didn’t faze me at all,” she told The Times with a frankness that hasn’t aided her case.

President Donald Trump has refused to take back Hoda Muthana and Britain has cancelled Begum’s citizenship.

The two problems with this are that the children of these and any other women could be entitled to, for example British citizenship; it would be against international law to leave the women stateless.

In an related move, the government said today it wanted to strengthen “arrangements for managing the return of Australians who pose a terrorism threat”.

“It is vital for our national security that we deal with Australians who travelled to the conflict zone in Iraq and Syria as far from our shores as possible,” Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton said.

“Australians who are involved in supporting terrorism, and who may have fought with terrorists in Syria or Iraq, pose a significant threat, especially since the military collapse of ISIL.

“That’s why we’re introducing Temporary Exclusion Orders, which would prevent Australians involved in terrorism overseas from legally returning to Australia for up to two years.”

Britain has attempted to classify Begum as Bangladeshi through her parents, but the country has rejected this, much as Fiji rejected terrorist suspect Neil Prakash after Australia withdrew his citizenship.

Women who had earlier come back to Britain have had their children taken from them out of fears over how they would be raised. If these women were a danger to their children, what sort of menace would they become to the general public?

It is probably unfair to heap the consequences of the deranged pursuits of the mother onto the child, and it could be that baby has a greater claim to citizenship than her. There is no simple reconciliation of the competing priorities.

But the fate of the mother — and father — should be made clear.

They have abrogated their right to live in a country that they deserted for declared enemies of the lives they had enjoyed. And they should not be allowed back to contaminate mainstream Islam with deranged mindsets that could not even he shaken by the sight of a severed head in a bin.