Jailing helpers of IS families ‘unconstitutional’: PM

Zac de Silva and Grace Crivellaro |

Dozens of Australian women and children have been trying to return home from a Syrian refugee camp.
Dozens of Australian women and children have been trying to return home from a Syrian refugee camp.

A plan for people who help Islamic State-linked families to be thrown in jail is unconstitutional, the prime minister says, as aid agencies warn it could set a dangerous precedent. 

The federal opposition plans to introduce legislation to parliament in March that would punish anyone who helps the so-called “ISIS brides” return to Australia with up to 10 years’ jail.

A group of 34 Australian women and children has been trying to return home from a Syrian refugee camp.

They travelled to the Middle East with men who wanted to fight for Islamic State before the terror organisation was defeated in 2019.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese
Anthony Albanese said the coalition plan was designed to get a headline. (Mick Tsikas/AAP PHOTOS)

They have been issued with Australian passports but were unable to travel to the Syrian capital Damascus for a flight home.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese was scathing of the coalition’s proposal, describing it as “nonsense that was not thought through in order to get a headline”.

“They themselves couldn’t explain how that was constitutional,” he told ABC radio on Tuesday. 

He reiterated the government would not be repatriating the group and temporary exclusion laws were already operating.

Women walk in the al-Hol camp in Hasakeh province, Syria
Anthony Albanese says he’s sympathetic with the children stuck in Syria. (AP PHOTO)

One of the women has been barred from returning after being handed a temporary exclusion order under Australian counterterrorism laws.

“The full force of the law has been implemented to the extent that we can,” Mr Albanese said.

Opposition Leader Angus Taylor said he would make it illegal to help the repatriation of people who had travelled to declared terrorist hotspots or committed a terrorist offence.

“We need to shut the door to people who are going to bring hate and violence to our shores from another part of the world,” he said on Monday.

Greens home affairs spokesperson David Shoebridge slammed the coalition for proposing non-government organisations like Save the Children Australia be criminalised for helping Australians return home. 

Australian Greens Senator David Shoebridge
David Shoebridge says the coalition proposal “is a remarkable low”. (Lukas Coch/AAP PHOTOS)

“The idea that any serious Australian political party would make it a crime for Australians to try and help Australian children and bring them back to safety is a remarkable low, even in the current climate on the immigration debate,” the senator told ABC radio.

Save the Children Australia chief executive Mat Tinkle said the proposed laws sounded like a “reckless” thought bubble that would set a dangerous precedent. 

Save the Children Australia CEO Mat Tinkler
The opposition’s proposal is a slippery slope, Save the Children’s Mat Tinkler says. (Con Chronis/AAP PHOTOS)

“I think it’s pretty reckless, to be honest,” he told ABC TV on Monday.

Mr Tinkler said he did not know whether his organisation would be caught up in the coalition’s policy and has offered to brief the party on Save the Children’s work in Syria.

Mr Albanese doubled down on his remarks that he is sympathetic with the children stuck in Syria, but that it was a choice made by their parents to go there.

The prime minister’s assertion on Monday that the coalition allowed more than 40 people into Australia, including fighters, was rejected by former leader Scott Morrison who said only orphaned minors were granted entry under his government.

AAP