The mother of a 'jihadi bride' who left Lewisham to join ISIS in Syria has made an emotional plea for her daughter to come home.

Victoria Dare, mother of Khadijah Dare who left to join the terror group in 2013 appeared on BBC2 programme Jihadi Brides to plead for her daughter to come home.

Mrs Dare revealed that she took her daughter and grandson to the airport before they left for Syria, thinking that her daughter was leaving to study abroad.

She said: "She was very nervous, she appeared not to be happy at all.

"She didn't talk to me when she was checking in, we did everything and when she was going, she just said, 'you won't see me any more'.

"I said, what do you mean? She said 'you won't see me anymore mum.' That was it."

Mrs Dare moved to the UK in 1987 from Nigeria and her daughter was born in 1991, initially called Grace.

The family have always been devout Christians and Mrs Dare revealed that her daughter regularly went to church and prayed.

Grace announced that she was a Muslim when she was 17, then changed her name to Khadija, left home and had a baby.

Khadija now posts radical messages on social media to try and radicalise other British girls.

Last year, she posted a message stating that she wanted to be the first woman to kill a UK or US citizen and praised the ISIS beheading of American journalist James Wright Foley.

Although Khadija's terrorist husband died whilst fighting Syrian forces, it appears she has no desire to return home.

Despite this, Mrs Dare is still holding on to the hope that Grace will come home to Lewisham.

She told the programme: "I want you back, that's what I've said.

"I want you back in my life, you have to come back to me. That's what I always say.

"She is the only child I have, she is supposed to be my companion and the devil took her away from me."

Police know that 22 British women and girls have travelled to Syria, but they think another 40 could have gone without being reported missing.