May 22, 2026 — 7:45amThe remaining seven women and 14 children linked to Islamic State have left the al-Roj camp in Syria and are on their way back to a frosty reception in Australia.Camp director Haval Rashid confirmed the movement of women overnight from the camp towards Damascus, Syria’s capital, where they are expected to be met by representatives of their Australian supporters and brought home.The Al-Roj detention camp in northern Syria.It’s unclear when they will return to Australia, but five of the women and seven children are expected to return to Sydney, and two women and seven children to Melbourne. It’s also unclear what criminal charges, if any, the women might be charged with when they arrive.New exclusive polling, conducted in mid-May after an earlier cohort of four other women and their children had re-entered Australia, confirms their return is deeply unpopular in this country.The Resolve poll asked what the government should do with the returning women. It found 39 per cent of Australians believe the women should be jailed or put in detention “until we know it is safe to release them”.A series of options were presented to respondents, and only 11 per cent said the women who went or were lured to live under Islamic State should be able to live freely in Australia unless they are charged with a crime.Those on the right of politics significantly favoured harsher treatment, with almost half – 49 per cent – of Coalition voters, and 60 per cent of One Nation voters favouring indefinite detention. Eight per cent of Coalition voters and just 2 per cent of One Nation voters believed they should be able to live freely unless they are charged with a crime.Almost a quarter of respondents to the poll agreed the women should take part in deradicalisation programs to “ensure they fit back into Australian life”, and about 16 per cent said they should be monitored with electronic bracelets or via surveillance.Another 23 per cent agreed with the proposition that they “should take part in deradicalisation programs to ensure they fit back into Australian life”.Labor and Greens voters were only slightly less likely to favour the detention option. The wide suspicions have been echoed by the political response in Australia.Social Services Minister Tanya Plibersek told ABC TV on Friday: “I can tell you that they’ll face the same consequences as the first group, which is if there are any crimes that they’re accused of, they’ll be taken into custody and treated with the full force of the law.”And Opposition leader Angus Taylor said the government “should be doing everything in its power to prevent these people from coming.“They turned their back on this country to support a terrorist organisation - one that has been guilty of extraordinary atrocities, including on Australians.”Meanwhile, advocates for the women’s cause, including family members, have been silent about the group, who they are, and the seven years they have spent in detention.When an earlier cohort of four women and nine children returned with family members on May 7, three of the women were arrested. Two were charged with crimes against humanity relating to enslavement and using a slave, and one was charged with entering a terrorist zone.The fourth woman is living in the community without being charged.To the extent media organisations, including this one, have had access to the cohort in the Syrian camps, reporting has focused on the children, who have expressed their desire to live in Australia.Get alerts on breaking news as it happens. Sign up for our Breaking News Alert.Michael Bachelard is a senior writer and former deputy editor and investigations editor of The Age. He has worked in Canberra, Melbourne and Jakarta, has written two books and won multiple awards for journalism, including the Gold Walkley.Connect via X or email.From our partners
More ISIS brides begin the journey home as new poll reveals Australians oppose their return
The al-Roj camp has confirmed the movement of the women overnight from the camp towards Damascus, where they are expected to be met by representatives of their Australian supporters.











