The Australian Government has officially decided to approve the return of a Sydney-born woman previously detained in a northeastern Syrian detention camp due to her past affiliation with ISIS.
The high-priority national security decision follows the exhaustion of all available temporary legal blockades, leaving federal ministers with no further constitutional basis to bar a citizen from entering the country.
According to Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke, the returnee—recognized as the final remaining individual in the Syrian cohort with previous extremist ties and a lawful right to return—will be subjected to the most rigid security conditions in national history.
Under the newly enforced judicial control framework, she will face continuous, active surveillance to completely mitigate potential threats to public safety.
Federal law enforcement authorities confirmed that the woman must strictly report her exact residential location, employment details, and educational pathways.
Furthermore, severe telecommunication limits apply: she must formally notify intelligence agencies at least 24 hours prior to using any communications device, including public phones, while all her personal social media channels will remain under automated, round-the-clock government monitoring.
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