Skip to main content
Isis fighters to be stripped of passports

THE government was yesterday accused of seeking to abdicate responsibility after it announced powers to cancel the passports of British nationals who travel abroad to fight for Islamic State (Isis).

They are among a number of measures to be included in a counter-terrorism Bill in Parliament this month, David Cameron has said.

Legislation would block individuals from returning from Syria and Iraq to Britain for at least two years unless they comply with strict conditions.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
UNION RIGHTS ARE HUMAN RIGHTS: St Mungo's workers outside the homeless charity's head quarters in Tower Hill, London, as they start a month long strike over pay, May 2023
Workers' Rights / 21 March 2026
21 March 2026

The unions are unhappy with the Employment Rights Act 2025 and with good reason. KEITH EWING and Lord JOHN HENDY KC take a close look at why the Bill promised more than it delivered

WORKERS ON THE MARCH: Calling for a new deal for working people in 2022
TUC Congress 2025 / 8 September 2025
8 September 2025

Labour must not allow unelected members of the upper house to erode a single provision of the Employment Rights Bill, argues ANDY MCDONALD MP

People taking part in a national march for Palestine on Whitehall in central London, January 18, 2025
Features / 21 July 2025
21 July 2025

From Gaza protest bans to proscribing Palestine Action, political elites are showing a crisis of confidence as they abandon Roy Jenkins’s apologetic approach for Suella Braverman’s aggressive ‘hate march’ rhetoric, writes PAUL DONOVAN