Gulf Today

Aussie woman gets bail after arrest over Daesh links

- Associat ed Pr ess

SYDNEY: An Australian woman charged with willingly entering part of Syria that was under control of the Daesh group was freed on bail on Friday as a debate raged about the risk to the community.

Mariam Raad, 31, is one of several Australian­s whose husbands were killed or jailed ater they joined the Daesh group. Australia repatriate­d four such women and 13 children from a Syrian refugee camp in October. Raad has been living in the town of Young, in New South Wales state, and was first arrested on Thursday. Federal and state police executed warrants at her home and the home of a relative in Sydney.

Raad was charged with entering, or remaining in, a part of Syria that was under the control of terrorists, a breach of federal law. If found guilty, she faces up to 10 years in prison.

Her bail conditions included a requiremen­t to surrender her passport and a ban from her contacting anyone in prison or anyone associated with a terrorist group. She is also banned from acquiring a gun.

Her lawyer, Moustafa Khier of Birchgrove Legal, told the Guardian newspaper that the court heard of the “wealth of evidence” that Raad had been working hard to reintegrat­e herself and her family.

“Mariam has always said that she would comply with any government orders,” Moustafa Khier told the Guardian, adding that law enforcemen­t agencies had categorise­d her as low risk in deciding to repatriate her.

Federal Treasurer Jim Chalmers said the returned women posed no threat to the community but authoritie­s would continue to monitor them.

“There’s obviously a process to go through now,” Chalmers told the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corp.

But deputy opposition leader Sussan Ley said that a problem that was once confined to parts of Sydney had spread out across Australia.

“We don’t know where these people have been resetled. We don’t know which communitie­s have been put at risk. We don’t know where they are moving in and out of,” Ley said.

And David Elliot, the state’s former police minister, said he had received “completely opposite” advice on Raad than the government, with authoritie­s telling him that she was a security threat.

“Somehow, magically, when Anthony Albanese became prime minister, these Daesh brides stopped being a security threat,” Elliot said.

Prosecutor­s claim Raad traveled to Syria in early 2014 to join her husband, Muhammad Zahab, who let Australia a year earlier to join the Daesh group to fight. Prosecutor­s say Raad was aware of her husband’s activities and willingly travelled to the conflict region.

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