An ISIS bride returning to Australia said she did not “regret living under Islamic State” and would never come home in a resurfaced interview from 2019.
‘I don’t regret living under Islamic State’: ISIS bride returning to Australia said she wouldn’t come home in resurfaced interview An ISIS bride returning to Australia said she would never come home because there were “naked women on the streets” in a resurfaced interview from 2019.
An ISIS bride returning to Australia said she did not “regret living under Islamic State” and would never come home in a resurfaced interview from 2019. Former Sydney nursing student Janai Safar made the remarks to The Australian, after travelling to ISIS-controlled Syria in 2015 and marrying an Islamic State fighter. Ms Safar has since been identified as one of the ISIS brides expected to arrive in Australia on Thursday with her nine-year-old son.
, Ms Safar said she did not want her son growing up in Australia because there were “naked women on the streets”. She said she and a cousin had made the decision to leave Australia after researching material online and then fled without telling their families.
“It was my decision to come here to go away from where women are naked on the street. I don’t want my son to be raised around that," Ms Safar said in 2019.
“I didn’t train or kill anyone. I just sat at home, and they will put me in jail, they will take my child off me. Why? I’m a Muslim.
“I saw everything they did and no one gets punished for that. They say I’m not supposed to be in Syria but they come to Syria with planes. Ms Safar was confirmed on Thursday as one of the group of 13 ISIS brides and children returning to Australia. Melbourne grandmother Kawsar Abbas as well as adult daughters Zahra and Zeinab were identified as the other three women flying home with their nine children.
Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke confirmed on Wednesday that the group of 13 was intending to return to Australia. The government has shrouded the ISIS brides controversy in secrecy and refused to say when they would return or where they would reside. Australian Federal Police Commissioner Krissy Barrett said that “some” of the women would face arrest upon their arrival and others would be investigated. Potential offences include terrorism offences such as entering or remaining in declared terrorist zone.
The Department of Home Affairs declined to tell Sky News where the women and children would be going or when they would arrive. Victoria Police told Sky News it was aware some ISIS brides may return to the state and said it would work with federal agencies on reintegration where required.
“Victoria Police is aware there are Australian citizens in camps in Syria who may look to return home, including to Victoria," a spokesperson said. "The assessment of applications for travel documents for Australian citizens seeking to return from any foreign conflict zone is managed by the Commonwealth government.
"However, NSW Police Minister Yasmin Catley has since confirmed that two members of the ISIS bride group will land in NSW. “This is an operational matter for the NSW Police, but I can assure this House the NSW police and the Australian Federal Police are working closely together,” she said.
Isis Brides ISIS Bride Returning To Australia Said She Would N Syria Australia
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