Shamima Begum spent time nursing injured ISIS fighters while in Raqqa, according to reports today.

The ISIS bride, who left Britain for Syria from Bethnal Green, in London, cared for injured jihadi fighters.

She cared for the fighters while her terrorist husband attacked coalition forces, it is claimed.

The 19-year-old was reportedly sent to work in a hospital in the former ISIS stronghold in northern Syria.

She was one of three schoolgirls - along with Kadiza Sultana and Amira Abase - from Bethnal Green Academy who left their homes and families in February 2015 to join a fourth Bethnal Green schoolgirl in Syria who had left London they year before.

Ms Sultana was reported to have been killed in an airstrike on Raqqa in May 2016, while Ms Begum has recently heard second-hand from other people that Miss Abase, and the other schoolgirl who left Britain in 2014, may still be alive.

When she arrived, Miss Begum was put in a house where jihadist brides-to-be waited to be married, she said.

Sources told the  Daily Mirror : "We have ­intelligence from people on the ground.

“We know that in her first year in Raqqa she worked in the hospital treating ISIS fighters, while her husband mounted attacks on US-led coalition forces.

"Women worked as cleaners, cooks and ad hoc nurses in the hospital where IS soldiers that had a chance of recovery were patched up – those badly injured were shot dead. Latterly, she worked more closely with patients.

“We are not clear if Begum worked as a volunteer or was forced, but she willingly flew to Turkey and got across the border to join ISIS.”

Ms Begum was married 10 days after arriving in Raqqa in 2015 to a Dutchman who had converted to Islam.

She claims her husband was later arrested, charged with spying and tortured.

She left Raqqa in January 2017 with her husband but her children, a girl aged a year and nine months old and a three-month-old boy, both died in the recent months.

Her son had an unknown illness worsened by malnutrition, The Times said.

She said she had a "mostly" a "normal life in Raqqa, every now and then bombing and stuff".

She told the paper: "But when I saw my first severed head in a bin it didn't faze me at all.

"It was from a captured fighter seized on the battlefield, an enemy of Islam.

"I thought only of what he would have done to a Muslim woman if he had the chance."

The family went to Baghuz and she left there two weeks ago along a three-mile long corridor east of the town.

Her husband surrendered to a group of Syrian fighters allied to the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) and she has not seen him since, according to The Times.