MELBOURNE, Australia — The Australian government has formally prohibited an Australian national with suspected affiliations to the Islamic State militant group from re-entering the country from a Syrian detention facility. This individual was part of a 34-member group comprising women and children who faced repatriation setbacks earlier this week.
The group’s planned Monday flight from Damascus to Australia was abruptly halted by Syrian authorities due to procedural complications, forcing their return to the Roj detention camp. These camps have housed former IS combatants from various nations along with their families since the organization’s territorial defeat in Syria back in 2019. Despite this defeat, IS continues to pose security threats through sleeper cells executing attacks in both Syria and Iraq.
Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke confirmed that security assessments identified one individual within the group as meeting the risk criteria for entry prohibition, notwithstanding their Australian citizenship. The minister refrained from disclosing the person’s identity or the duration of the exclusion order.
“I can confirm that one individual in this cohort has been issued a temporary exclusion order, which was made on advice from security agencies,” Burke stated, while noting that other group members currently don’t meet the threshold for similar orders.
Under Australian legislation, the Home Affairs Minister holds authority to impose temporary exclusion orders preventing high-risk citizens from returning for periods up to two years. This development occurs amid previous government-assisted repatriations of Australian women and children from Syrian camps, though some have returned through independent means.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese reinforced the government’s stance, emphasizing that individuals who voluntarily allied with IS’s brutal ideology would receive no repatriation assistance. “These are people who chose to go overseas to align themselves with an ideology which is the caliphate, which is a brutal, reactionary ideology that seeks to undermine and destroy our way of life,” Albanese told journalists.
The Prime Minister acknowledged the unfortunate situation of children involved while maintaining the government’s position against assisting those who joined the so-called caliphate that once controlled extensive territories across Syria and Iraq.
