Kirsty Rosse-Emile is one of 11 Australian women, known as ISIS brides, pleading with the Albanese government to help them leave the squalid Syrian refugee camps with their collective 23 children.
The federal opposition has announced its plans to introduce a tough new law to make it harder for Australians with terror links to return home.
The federal government is facing mounting pressure over the potential return of the group of so-called “ISIS brides” – 34 ...
While defending the so-called SAVE America Act in February 2026, U.S. President Donald Trump repeatedly claimed the United States is the only country in the world that allows mail-in voting.  The full ...
The opposition's push to punish those who help Islamic State-linked families return home from Syria appears to be trying to ...
While one person from the group has been given a two-year temporary exclusion order barring their return, other members of the so-called "ISIS bride" cohort have been granted Australian passports as ...
Debate has intensified on how to deal with a group of 34 Australian women and children with links to Islamic State who plan to return to home. Sharp. Close to the ground. Digging deep. Your weekday ...
Australian Associated Press on MSN

Minister heads to US for talks as tariff hike looms

US President Donald Trump has unveiled global tariffs of 15 per cent following a legal set back to the economic measure, sparking renewed concern.