The woman had been issued a temporary exclusion order and was stopped at the airport in Damascus.

An Australian woman with connections to ISIS has been barred from returning to Australia after being issued with a temporary exclusion notice.

The final cohort of so-called “IS brides” is on its way back to Australia, but Australia’s temporary exclusion order regime appears to have worked.

As the final group of so-called “ISIS brides” makes its way back to Australia, the identity of the woman who has been barred from returning can now be revealed.

SYDNEY, May 26 (Reuters) - A group of seven Australian women and 12 children linked to the Islamic State militant group have made travel plans to return home, authorities said on…

A group of seven women and 12 children linked to suspected Islamic State fighters returned to Australia on Tuesday after years in Syria, police said.The so-called "ISIS brides"…

A group of seven women and 12 children linked to Islamic State fighters are bound for Australia after years in Syria, the Australian interior minister said on Tuesday.The…

Seven women with links to the self-proclaimed IS-group, and their children, are en route weeks after three women were arrested.

An airliner with Australian women and children linked to ISIS landed in Melbourne, facing potential legal consequences upon arrival.

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The woman had been issued a temporary exclusion order and was stopped at the airport in Damascus.

Australian Federal Police have not made any arrests but say inquiries are ongoing.

The woman has been charged with entering and remaining in a declared conflict zone and being a member of a terrorist organisation.

Two groups of women, who have become known as the "ISIS brides", have returned to Sydney and Melbourne this month along with their children.

An Australian mother of four has been held in custody after she appeared in a court charged with traveling to Syria and joining the Islamic State group.

Australian police charged on Thursday a woman linked to the Islamic State group with membership of a terrorist organisation and entering a known conflict zone.Hundreds of women…

The 34-year-old travelled to Syria over a decade ago to allegedly join Isis

An Australian woman has been charged with traveling to Syria and joining the Islamic State group

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — An Australian woman was charged Thursday with traveling to Syria and joining the Islamic State group, police said.

The 34-year-old traveled to Syria between 2013 and 2014 with others, including a man, to allegedly join the Islamic State, the Australian Federal Police (AFP) said in a statement.

Case follows repatriation of women and children held for years in Syrian camps without trial.