NSW Police will seek to speak with a cohort of women and children linked to ISIS fighters when they arrive in Australia, but a senior officer admits “they can go wherever they like”.
About one third of the cohort of 34 ISIS brides and their children have planned to return to New South Wales, according to NSW Premier Chris Minns.
ASIO has cleared this cohort of security concerns but the government still insists it will not bring back anyone – women or ...
Australia would be “safer” if ISIS brides were allowed to return, a leading doctor embroiled in the saga has said, as he ...
Deputy Opposition Leader Jane Hume has lashed out at the federal government’s handling of Australian ISIS brides stranded in ...
The head of Syria’s Roj internment camp has revealed two additional Australian ISIS brides considered to be “extremists” are being held separately to the group of 11 women and 23 children at the ...
Ultimately, the dilemma facing the Australian government about these women and their children stems from an uncomfortable truth: citizenship is a concept that sits above good and bad behavior.
A group of Australian women detained at a Syrian camp with their families over ties to Islamic State have offered an ...
Eleven Australian women with past links to Islamic State remain in limbo in northeastern Syria following a failed bid to leave the al-Roj detention camp earlier this week.
A group has been seeking a return to Australia after being held in a Syrian camp since the militant group’s defeat. While one so-called “ISIS bride” has been given a two-year temporary exclusion order ...
ISIS brides still being held in northern Syria have applied for Australian passports in an effort to return home.
A secret plan to bring back a group of ISIS-linked women and their children has been underway for “weeks”, according to insiders living in a camp in northeast Syria.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results