Australian news and politics: Second group of ‘ISIS brides’ touches down in Australia

RECAP: A group of women and children linked to ISIS have landed on separate flights into Melbourne and Sydney.

Max Corstorphan and Madeline Cove
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ISIS brides leave Melbourne airport

The two women and their children were escorted through a back door after arriving in Melbourne on Tuesday night.

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA- NewsWire Photos MAY 26, 2026: NCA Isis brides arrive in Melbourne traveling from Syria. NewsWire / Jason Edwards Picture: Jason Edwards
MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA- NewsWire Photos MAY 26, 2026: NCA Isis brides arrive in Melbourne traveling from Syria. NewsWire / Jason Edwards Credit: NCA NewsWire, Jason Edwards

Former lawyer and human rights activist Robert Van Aalst was seen leaving with the group.

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA- NewsWire Photos MAY 26, 2026: NCA Isis brides arrive in Melbourne traveling from Syria. Robert Van Aalst. NewsWire / Jason Edwards Picture: Jason Edwards
MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA- NewsWire Photos MAY 26, 2026: NCA Isis brides arrive in Melbourne traveling from Syria. Robert Van Aalst. NewsWire / Jason Edwards Credit: NCA NewsWire, Jason Edwards

Plane carrying ISIS-linked women and children lands in Sydney

A plane carrying more so-called “ISIS brides’ and their children touched down in Sydney just after 5.30pm AEST.

Four mothers and six children arrived from Doha after leaving the Al Roj refugee camp in Syria.

They are part of a larger group, all set to arrive today in Sydney and Melbourne.

The Sydney group is expected to be offered State Government health assistance, while NSW Police have said they do not expect to make any arrests, ABC reports.

Australian Federal Police officers patrol Sydney International Airport.
Australian Federal Police officers patrol Sydney International Airport. Credit: AAPIMAGE
Caitlyn Rintoul

Members of second ‘ISIS brides’ group touch down in Melbourne

Members of the second cohort of ISIS-linked women and children have touched down in Melbourne, with the remainder expected to arrive in Sydney later this afternoon.

Some of the group, understood to be two women and their seven children, arrived at Melbourne Tullamarine Airport on QR904 about 4.30pm AEST - roughly 40 minutes earlier than expected.

A Qatar Airways plane arrives at Melbourne airport carrying ‘ISIS brides’ and their children. 
PICTURE: 7NEWS
A Qatar Airways plane arrives at Melbourne airport carrying ‘ISIS brides’ and their children. PICTURE: 7NEWS Credit: 7NEWS

It’s understood four women and their children are due to arrive in Sydney just before 6pm AEST.

Australia’s government has warned the remaining women that they will face “the full force of the law” upon their return from a notorious camp in northern Syria if they are believed to have committed any crimes.

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ISIS bride’s old jihad posts resurface ahead of return home

Kirsty Rosse-Emile’s old social media accounts – littered with jihadist imagery, hard-line religious slogans and posts praising strict Islamic doctrine – are set to haunt the alleged ISIS bride when she lands in Melbourne tonight.

The Australian woman, who travelled from Victoria to Syria in 2014 to live under Islamic State, has spent years insisting she was “tricked” into joining the terror group and wants to return home with her children.

But her own father has publicly accused her of lying.

Guy Rosse-Emile told The Nightly last year his daughter willingly left Australia with her husband, Moroccan-Australian jihadist Nabil Kadmiry, specifically to live “under the caliphate”.

“They went there with a view of establishing themselves in Islamic State in Syria under the caliphate,” he said.

“When she said, ‘Oh, I was tricked’ and all that, it’s not true.”

Ms Rosse-Emile, who grew up in Melbourne’s south-east, was just 19 when she left Australia to live in Syria. Credit: Unknown/ABC

Now, archived Facebook accounts linked to Ms Rosse-Emile provide a confronting glimpse into the increasingly hard-line ideology she appeared to embrace before leaving Australia.

Read the full story.

Incoming Defence Chief Mark Hammond tells critics to “stop politicising AUKUS”

Australia’s Chief of Navy Mark Hammond has hit out at critics of the massive AUKUS nuclear-powered submarine project, saying they should “stop politicising” the endeavour.

Vice Admiral Hammond, who will soon take over as Chief of Defence, has told the Indian Ocean Defence and Security conference in Perth that the evidence so far is that AUKUS is succeeding.

“I think we should stop politicising ambitious, challenging programs with the partners being completely transparent about the risks and the challenges,” he said.

“This is not a simple program, but let’s put it into context, the first submarines we operated acquired just prior to World War One were the longest range, most capable submarines on the planet”

Terror warning not fully read by police commander before Bondi attack

The NSW Police commander who was charged with looking after the Hanukkah by the Sea event that was targeted in the Bondi Beach terror attack has revealed he did not read a security threat alert email properly, until after the deadly event.

On Monday, the Royal Commission into antisemitism heard that the Community Security Group, a Jewish-run organisation that operates mostly in Sydney and Melbourne, emailed police warning of the security threat level for Jewish Australians.

“Please be advised of the following upcoming Jewish communal events in your police area command. We kindly request your assistance with any policing measures that your command may deem appropriate,” the alert sent to NSW Police said.

“The current security alert level for the NSW Jewish community is … high. A terrorist attack against the NSW Jewish community is likely, and there is a high level of antisemitic vilification.”

Shockingly, the police commander who was in charge admitted they did not read the email fully, including sections where high-risk events were specifically detailed.

“I don’t know that I got that far into the email. I’ve certainly read it since December 14. I couldn’t confidently say I’d read it prior,” the commander, referred to as ABQ for legal purposes, told the commission on Tuesday.

“Whilst I didn’t read it, I don’t say that anything in it would have changed my thoughts.”

Pro-Palestine Parliament House foyer protest sparks shutdown

A pro-Palestine protest briefly disrupted activity inside Parliament House, with demonstrators staging a sit-in inside the building’s front foyer and forcing the closure of the main public entrance.

The group, estimated to number about 50 people and including activists linked to the global Sumud flotilla, recreated the “stress position” they say activists were subjected to by the Israeli authorities, kneeling with their arms behind their backs as security moved quickly to clear the area.

The demonstration caused delays at the entrance, leaving tourists and a school group waiting outside as security responded.

Several protesters were escorted from the building, with one woman calling “free Palestine” and “sanction Israel” as she was led away.

Parliament’s front doors remained closed for a period, while some visitors and staff were redirected through basement access points. Guardian Australia understands some demonstrators may face banning orders from Parliament House.

Tehan blasts Labor tax ‘wedge’

The Coalition has escalated its attack on Labor’s tax reform package, with opposition energy spokesman Dan Tehan accusing the government of prioritising politics over policy as parliament prepares to debate the legislation this week.

The political fight centres on Labor’s decision to tie its proposed capital gains tax and negative gearing changes to the $250 Working Australian Tax Offset, leaving the opposition facing an all-or-nothing vote despite backing the offset itself.

“So obviously there’s been discussions on what is, let’s put it this way, blatant wedge legislation by the government,” Mr Tehan said.

“They are increasing the overall tax increase in this nation (and) they haven’t even finalised how they’re going to do it. I mean, who are they going to carve out?

“Are they going to carve out hairdressers? Are they going to carve out carpenters? Are they going to carve out plumbers? We don’t even know that yet.

“What has Anthony Albanese been thinking about? The politics, how can he wedge?

“So we’ll obviously respond to his petty politics at the appropriate moment but the Australian people can see through it, let’s be frank, the Prime Minister lied, and he said yesterday in the parliament it’s time to be honest.”

Western Australia unveils plans for missile hub in state’s south-west

Military missiles could be manufactured in Western Australia under an ambitious push by the Premier, Roger Cook, to establish an advanced weapons manufacturing hub in the state.

On Tuesday, the Premier is announcing that WA is seeking formal expressions of interest from global defence giants to set up a large-scale facility, which is expected to be in the coal-mining town of Collie.

The missile factory idea is being unveiled as the Indian Ocean Defence & Security Conference and Exhibition formally returns to Perth this week.

The proposed factory would help support the Commonwealth’s Guided Weapons and Explosive Ordnance Enterprise (GWEO) to supply locally made munitions for the Australian Defence Force.

Read more.

Hastie fires at Labor over tax package

The Coalition is standing firm against Labor’s tax reform package, with Opposition frontbencher Andrew Hastie accusing the government of using the $250 Working Australians Tax Offset to force support for broader and more contentious tax changes.

The Albanese Government has bundled the worker tax relief with reforms to capital gains tax and negative gearing, setting up a political showdown when the legislation reaches parliament on Thursday.

“Labor’s trying to put a poison pill in this bill, the working Australians tax offset, which we support. But nonetheless, the Australian people did not vote for an increase in their taxes, and this is exactly what Labor is going to do, and this is ultimately a vote for more taxes, which is why we will oppose it,” Mr Hastie told Sky News.

“This is classic wedge politics, and people can see through it.”

Despite backing the offset itself, the Coalition says it will oppose the package in its current form, arguing Labor is trying to pressure the opposition into supporting tax measures it fundamentally rejects.

Andrew Hastie slams Labor tax ‘poison pill’.
Andrew Hastie slams Labor tax ‘poison pill’. Credit: NCA NewsWire

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Senior officer ignored terror warning prior to Bondi Beach massacre.