Australia news live: Greens urge Labor to stop treating children detained in Syria camp like ‘disposable political pawns’

Australia news live: Greens urge Labor to stop treating children detained in Syria camp like ‘disposable political pawns’


‘They are kids’: Greens issue fresh pleas after reports from inside al-Roj camp

The Greens are pleading with the Albanese government to stop treating children detained in north-east Syria as “disposable political pawns” and assist their return to Australia, after first-hand accounts from inside al-Roj camp laid bare the extent of their plight.

The Guardian on Thursday reported the stories of several of the 23 Australian children held in the detention camp along with their mothers, the wives and widows of suspected Islamic State fighters who travelled to Syria during its so-called caliphate.

“Why do I have to be in here? I don’t want to be in a tent. I don’t want to be in a camp. I don’t want to be in a prison … I just want to go and be free,” one of the children, 11-year-old Baidaa, said.

Speaking after the accounts were published, the Greens home affairs spokesperson, David Shoebridge, told Guardian Australia:

double quotation markJust listen to the recordings – they are kids. Children are crying and distressed because politicians are treating them as disposable political pawns. One of these kids has never seen a house before, has only ever grown up with people living in tents. For the prime minister to know this and just shrug his shoulders because he wants to look crueller than Pauline Hanson is hard to see.

I used to think that it was accepted across the board that one of the primary roles of the Australian government is to keep Australian children safe.

I have met children at this camp, and there were just that, children. Not threats and not a political football that can be kicked around by One Nation, Liberals and Labor.

You can hear the children speak on the Full Story podcast:

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Doctor who went to Syrian camp calls Albanese ‘heartless’

The Sydney doctor advocating for the return of 11 Australian mothers and their 23 children from Syrian detention has called Anthony Albanese “heartless” for refusing to rescue them.

Jamal Rifi has long been advocating for the group’s repatriation, leading private discussions with the government on ways to bring them home.

Angus Taylor, recently elevated to opposition leader, has suggested the government has offered assistance to the group, despite the prime minister saying no help will be offered and expressing his “contempt” for the mothers, who are the wives and widows of ISIS soldiers.

Rifi said there had been no government help and Taylor was “the new kid on the block and] does not know what he is talking about”.

double quotation markI have been frustrated and upset, not now but before, when we realised that the government is not undertaking any repatriation. They left us no option except to do-it-yourself repatriation

Rifi said the home affairs minister, Tony Burke, had told him there would be no repatriation in mid-2025. He said that was the last time he had spoken to Tony Burke, his former friend who he had campaigned for in the May election.

double quotation markWe were told on no uncertain terms that they’re not going to play any part in repatriating this cohort, and I was not happy then, I am not happy now. …

Do you think we have any chance with the opposition of getting them back in? No chance whatsoever. I would have thought we had a better chance with the Albanese Labor government, I just did not realise that he is so heartless.

Rifi said he had not given up on saving the group and would stay with family in Tripoli, Lebanon, as he worked to resolve the situation.

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