Syrian officials have stated that the Australian government held full responsibility for facilitating the return of 13 women and children connected to ISIS, known as the ‘ISIS brides,’ to Australia.
The authorities in Syria indicated they were awaiting Australia’s establishment of necessary protocols before permitting the group’s departure.
This group is expected to arrive in Australia on Thursday, with some members set to land in Sydney, while others will reach Melbourne.
The returning individuals include four Australian women: 54-year-old Kawsar Abbas, her daughters Zahra Ahmad, 33, and Zeinab Ahmed, 31, who is a former nursing student, along with Janai Safar, and their nine children.
“The Australian government had the ultimate authority,” a Syrian official shared with the ABC on Wednesday night, emphasizing that “the ball was entirely in the court of the Australians.”
‘The ball was entirely in the court of the Australians.’
The women and children spent two weeks in Syria’s capital after leaving the Al Roj refugee camp in the north, where they had lived for seven years.
Daily Mail has contacted the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) for comment.
Australia was a ‘deciding factor’ in the latest attempt by a group of ISIS brides and their children seeking to return home, according to Syrian authorities (file image)
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and his government have continued to insist that they have not supported the group in their return to Australia.
‘The government has not and will not provide any assistance to this group,’ Albanese said on Wednesday.
‘These are people who have made what is a horrific choice, to join a dangerous terrorist organisation and to place their children in an extraordinary situation.
‘Any members of this cohort who have committed crimes can expect to face the full force of the law and that will occur.’
As of Thursday morning, the women had boarded their connecting flight in Doha and spoken about their hope for life in Australia.
‘We just want our children to be safe. It was like hell (in Syria) for them,’ one told ABC News.
Another said: ‘One of the boys has an Australian accent, even though he’s never been to Australia.’
Officers from the Australian Federal Police are expected to take some of the women into custody upon arrival at the airport.
‘ISIS brides’ refers to women recruited by the Islamic State and moved to Iraq or Syria to marry fighters and raise children

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and his government have continued to insist that they have not supported the group in their return to Australia
The children who return will be asked to undergo community integration programs, therapeutic support, and countering violent extremism programs, the force said.
When asked by the Daily Mail about the cost of monitoring these individuals, Albanese refused to comment, repeating that authorities are not providing assistance.
He also did not respond when asked if his government expects other Australian families to follow the group now that refugee camps are being closed in Syria.
‘ISIS brides’ is a reference to women recruited by the Islamic State and moved to Iraq or Syria to marry fighters and raise their children.
Many of the women have spoken about being tricked into living in Syria, with some experts suggesting recruiters paint a utopian view of life with the terrorist group.
AFP Commissioner Krissy Barrett said investigators considered ‘someone’s state of mind, their intent, and their awareness and understanding of the situation they were in’ before arrest.
‘That most definitely forms part of the extensive investigations that we have done and in fact goes to us being able to prove or make the allegations and place those charges,’ she told reporters on Wednesday.
The group of 13 is the third contingent of families linked to ISIS who have returned to Australia.
Eight orphaned children came back to Australia under Scott Morrison’s government in 2019.
Four women and 13 children were then allowed into the country by the Albanese government three years later.















