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 State and the enslavement of a Yazidi woman. The Australian Federal Police (AFP) said the women, 31-year-old Zeinab Ahmed, 32-year-old Janai Safar and 53-year-old Kawsar Abbas, were detained as they stepped off a repatriation flight from Syria, almost a decade after they first travelled into Islamic State territory.

The three were part of a wider group widely labelled 'ISIS brides' in Australian and international media, comprising four women and nine children and grandchildren who went to Syria to marry Islamic State fighters before the group's self-proclaimed caliphate collapsed in 2019. They were later held for years in the Al Roj camp in north-eastern Syria, a sprawling and volatile detention site run for a time by the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces before control shifted amid renewed conflict and the emergence of Syria's new government.

Court documents, cited by ABC News in Australia, allege that Ahmed and Abbas took part ininternational slavery offences, including the purchase of a Yazidi woman in 2015. Prosecutors say the woman was bought as a slave, in line with Islamic State's notorious practice of targeting the Yazidi minority in Iraq and Syria. The AFP has not yet detailed the alleged victim's current location or condition, and no direct evidence has been released publicly.

Safar, the third defendant, faces terrorism charges linked to alleged membership of Islamic State. AFP Assistant Commissioner for Counter Terrorism Stephen Nutt said the terrorism offences carry maximum sentences of up to 10 years' imprisonment, while the slavery‑related charges are punishable by up to 25 years.

Nutt told reporters the arrests followed a 'near decade-long wait' to bring the women before an Australian court, underlining both how long Western governments have grappled with their citizens stranded in Syrian camps and how politically fraught repatriation has become. Australian authorities had known the women were alive in Al Roj, but any move to bring them home risked the very scene that unfolded in Melbourne, immediate arrests, terrorism charges and an explosive domestic debate.

According to images released by the AFP, officers met the women directly at the airport gate and escorted them from the aircraft in handcuffs. Local media reported that a group of men dressed in black, some apparently masked, had arrived at Melbourne Airport in anticipation of the flight, apparently intending to usher the women out of the terminal. Whatever they had in mind, they were overtaken by the speed and choreography of the police operation.

The ISIS brides controversy has become a political trap for governments from Canberra to London. In Australia, Syria's new government has reportedly been pushing since February to expel remaining Australian nationals from its territory, forcing Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's administration to accept their return despite fierce criticism from opponents and parts of the public.

Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke sought to draw a hard line in advance. He said before the plane landed that returning women would receive no assistance beyond standard passport and consular services. There would be no special resettlement package and no public sympathy. The implication was clear: whatever they endured in Al Roj, they were returning as suspects, not victims.

The three women have already appeared in court and were refused bail, remaining in custody while the cases proceed. So far, no plea has been entered. Their legal teams have not publicly commented in detail, and it remains to be seen whether they will argue that they were coerced, trafficked or otherwise lacked meaningful agency when they entered Islamic State-controlled territory, a defence raised in other ISIS bride cases in Europe, though with mixed success.

The stakes extend well beyond Australia. Rights groups and some security analysts have warned for years that leaving citizens in camps such as Al Roj risks radicalisation, exploitation and eventual uncontrolled escape. Yet the optics of flying home women branded as ISIS brides, some accused of buying a Yazidi slave for around $10,000 according to earlier media reporting, sit uneasily with voters who see no reason to show mercy.

Source: International Business Times UK