Australian Woman Linked to Islamic State Charged With Terror Offences

SYDNEY, May 28 (Reuters) – An Australian ⁠woman ⁠who returned home in September ⁠from a Syrian refugee camp has been charged with allegedly ​joining Islamic State and entering and remaining in a declared conflict zone, authorities said on ‌Thursday.

The 34-year-old travelled to Syria ‌between 2013 and 2014 with others, including a man, to allegedly join Islamic ⁠State, the ⁠Australian Federal Police (AFP) said in a statement. The man is believed ​to be in a prison in the Middle East, the AFP added.

The woman is expected to appear in a Melbourne court on Thursday. Both offences carry a maximum penalty of ​up to 10 years in prison.

Kurdish forces detained the woman in March 2019 ⁠and ⁠she was held with family ⁠members in ​the Al-Hawl refugee camp. Police said she returned to Australia from Lebanon with ​another woman, 36, and that ⁠investigations into both women were ongoing.

“It is important to note that a period of time without charges being laid is not an indicator that investigations have ceased,” AFP Deputy Commissioner of National Security Investigations Hilda Sirec said.

“Investigations are continuing into all ⁠the recent adult female returnees from Syrian camps.”

The charges follow the return earlier ⁠this month of two women charged with slavery-related offences and a third with terror offences, including allegedly joining Islamic State. A second group of Australian women and children arrived on Tuesday from a Syrian camp with no charges laid on arrival.

The return of both groups has drawn criticism from political opponents, who say the centre-left government failed to stop their travel to Australia. The government says it did not assist their travel and ⁠that there are “very serious limits” on preventing citizens from re-entering the country.

Between 2012 and 2016, some Australian women travelled to Syria to join their husbands who were allegedly members of Islamic State. Following the collapse of the ​caliphate in 2019, many were detained in camps.

(Reporting by Renju ​Jose in Sydney; Editing by Thomas Derpinghaus)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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