One Of Three British Sisters Thought To Have Joined ISIS Contacts Family

One Of Three British Sisters Thought To Have Joined ISIS Contacts Family
BRADFORD, ENGLAND - JUNE 16: Mohammed Shoaib (R) husband of Khadiji Bibi Dawwood and Akhtar Iqbal husband of Surgra Dawood and solicitor Balaal Hussain Khan (L) speak to media at the Bradford Hotel on June 16, 2015 in Bradford, England. Three sisters from Bradford are feared to have travelled to Syria with their nine children after going on a pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia. (Photo by Nigel Roddis/Getty Images)
BRADFORD, ENGLAND - JUNE 16: Mohammed Shoaib (R) husband of Khadiji Bibi Dawwood and Akhtar Iqbal husband of Surgra Dawood and solicitor Balaal Hussain Khan (L) speak to media at the Bradford Hotel on June 16, 2015 in Bradford, England. Three sisters from Bradford are feared to have travelled to Syria with their nine children after going on a pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia. (Photo by Nigel Roddis/Getty Images)

LONDON/ANKARA, June 17 (Reuters) - One of three British sisters, thought to have headed with their nine children to join Islamic State militants, has made contact with her family in Britain and given an indication the group may be in Syria, British police said on Wednesday.

British Muslims Khadija, Sugra and Zohra Dawood and their children, aged between three and 15, were reported missing six days ago. On Tuesday the husbands of two of the women appealed for their return, fearing they might have gone to Syria.

"We have received information that contact has been made with the family in the UK ," West Yorkshire police said in a statement. "Contact has been made by one of the missing women and there is an indication that they may have already crossed the border into Syria but this is uncorroborated."

The group flew to Saudi Arabia in May for an Islamic pilgrimage, and a Turkish security official said they traveled to Istanbul on June 9.

Their families grew concerned when they failed to arrive back in Britain on June 11 as expected and British police contacted their Turkish counterparts for help the next day.

Earlier on Wednesday a Turkish official said authorities were working to locate the women and their children, but had found no trace of them. "We have no idea if they are in Turkey or have crossed into Syria," the official said.

British authorities estimate more than 700 Britons have traveled to Syria, with a significant proportion thought to have joined Islamic State, which has taken over vast areas of the country and neighboring Iraq.

Islamic State is believed to have attracted thousands of foreign fighters, many of whom have passed through Turkey.

Turkey has rebuffed criticism from some Western countries for failing to stem the flow, arguing that domestic intelligence agencies need to do more to stop their nationals being radicalized and traveling to Turkey in the first place.

In February, Turkey accused Britain of taking too long to inform it about three London schoolgirls who had traveled to the country in what was suspected to be an attempt to journey on to Syria. (Reporting by Michael Holden in London and Orhan Coskun in Ankara; Writing by Nick Tattersall and Michael Holden; Editing by)

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