Three women accused of being ISIS brides were arrested in Melbourne on terror and slavery charges after years in a Syrian camp, thrusting repatriation and justice back into the spotlight.
The return of ISIS brides to Australia is one of the nation’s most high-profile and politically charged legal cases in recent ...
Melbourne grandmother Kawsar Abbas, 53, and her younger daughter Zeinab, 31, will both appear before a Melbourne magistrate court today. They were arrested by the Victorian Joint Counter Terrorism ...
A fourth woman — known as an “ISIS Bride” — has been charged by counter-terrorism police in Melbourne for being a member of a terrorist organization, as more Australian women who travelled to the ...
Three Australian women known as the “ISIS Brides” have been arrested on slavery- and terrorism-related charges after returning home with their 10 children, most of whom were born in a Syrian detention ...
The term “ISIS brides” is used to describe foreign women who travelled to Syria and Iraq between 2014 and 2019 to live under ...
Historic charges: The pair face Australia’s first crimes against humanity charges, each carrying up to 25 years’ imprisonment, over alleged Yazidi enslavement in Syria. Bail hearing ahead: A lengthy ...
Three alleged 'ISIS brides' were arrested at Melbourne Airport on Thursday 7 May as they landed in Australia, with federal police accusing them of terrorism and slavery offences linked to Islamic ...