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Guilty When Innocent. Australian Government’s Resistance to Bringing Home Wives and Children of Islamic State Fighters

Author

Listed:
  • Joumanah El-Matrah

    (School of Social Sciences, Western Sydney University, Penrith, NSW 2751, Australia)

  • Kamalle Dabboussy

    (Western Sydney Migrant Resource Centre, Liverpool, NSW 2170, Australia)

Abstract

Currently there are 20 Australian women and 47 children being held in the Al-Roj camp in Northern Syria, who are the family members of Islamic State fighters. The Australian government argues that it is both unsafe for government officials to rescue those held in the camp and unsafe for Australia to repatriate these women and children. This security rhetoric is commonly understood as Australia’s abandonment of its citizens and their entitlements to protection and repatriation. This paper argues that the Australian government is condemning its citizens to a condition of statelessness and displacement, simulating the following conditions under which refugees and asylum seekers are forced to live: murder, violence, deprivation of adequate food and shelter, disease, and the potential hazards of the COVID-19 infection. Rendering its citizens to a condition of statelessness and displacement constitutes both punishment meted out on those deemed guilty by their presence in Syria, and provides the Australian government the opportunity to revoke the citizenship of women and children. Three Australian women who travelled to Syria have already been stripped of their Australian citizenship. This paper explores the conditions and methods by which the Australian government has erased the entitlements, protections and certainty of citizenship for Australian Muslim women and children.

Suggested Citation

  • Joumanah El-Matrah & Kamalle Dabboussy, 2021. "Guilty When Innocent. Australian Government’s Resistance to Bringing Home Wives and Children of Islamic State Fighters," Social Sciences, MDPI, vol. 10(6), pages 1-13, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jscscx:v:10:y:2021:i:6:p:202-:d:566251
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    Cited by:

    1. Milena Tripkovic, 2023. "No Country For ‘Bad’ Men: Volatile Citizenship and the Emerging Features Of Global Neo-colonial Penality," The British Journal of Criminology, Centre for Crime and Justice Studies, vol. 63(6), pages 1351-1367.

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