Liberal leader Angus Taylor has called for clarity over the government's involvement in the high-profile “ISIS bride” saga, ...
The term “ISIS brides” is used to describe foreign women who travelled to Syria and Iraq between 2014 and 2019 to live under Islamic State rule. Many Australians who made the journey were young women ...
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View from The Hill: Chris Minns makes sense on ISIS brides’ children, while opposition adds to scaremongering
Among today’s leaders, New South Wales Premier Chris Minns is notable in a couple of ways. As a Labor leader, his views are a mix of the extremely tough and the very empathetic and compassionate. His ...
The Coalition wants to make it illegal to help ISIS brides return to Australia, under proposed new laws. The British have cemented their stakes in the future of AUKUS with one of their nuclear-powered ...
The Coalition has proposed legislation to make it a criminal offence to assist people “linked to terrorist organisations’ ...
Pauline Hanson has “apologised” while doubling down in a fiery interview over comments about Australian Muslims.
A plan to restrict the return of terror-linked Australians has been lashed amid fears one group could be captured by the ...
Eleven family groups – 34 individuals – who have been stuck in Syrian internment camps for years are trying to make their way home. Why were they in Syria in the first place?
Before flying to Syria to swear allegiance to Islamic State, Kirsty Rosse-Emile told her Melbourne housemate: 'I don't want to go back to school, I want to go and make bombs.' Now, about 16 years ...
Angus Taylor said the so-called ISIS brides were sympathetic to a ‘heinous ideology’ and called on Labor to tighten temporary exclusion legislation.
Health Minister Mark Butler has provided an update on the ISIS brides potential return to Australia saying there are ‘citizenship and passport’ considerations.
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