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 ...
The term “ISIS brides” is used to describe foreign women who travelled to Syria and Iraq between 2014 and 2019 to live under ...
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 ...
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 ...