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Senator slams Burke secrecy

December 5, 2025

Friday 05 December 2025
Ria Pandey
Geelong Advertiser


 Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke has come under fire from the Coalition after  new documents revealed he held closed-door talks with advocates lobbying to  repatriate so-called ISIS brides to Australia.
 
 The documents, obtained through questions on notice in Senate estimates on  Tuesday, included an emailed meeting briefing which outlined the conversation  between the Home Affairs Minister, apublic servant from the Department of  Home Affairs, advocate Kamalle Dabbousy and charity Save The Children.
 
 Mr Dabbousy's daughter, Mariam, has previously claimed she was tricked into  travelling to Islamic State territory by her former husband.
 
 She was repatriated in 2022. The emailed brief is not a transcript, but a  summary, of the meeting. It detailed Mr Burke's refusal to provide assurances  that the Australian government would provide the passports for repatriation,  as well as thanking the group for keeping their lobbying efforts out of the  media.
 
 According to the document, Mr Dabbousy spoke of the "physical and psychological  impact of what (was) happening inside the camps", referring to  "children being weaponised against their mothers, i.e. if they go beyond  the fence lines they will be shot".
 
 Mr Burke then responded there "may be a way to achieve the same outcome  without government undertakings", according to the brief.
 
 The public servant, who authored the email, was then asked to leave by Mr  Burke after Mr Dabbousy requested the chance to speak "frankly".
 
 This closed-door part of the meeting was criticised by Coalition finance  spokesman James Paterson, who claimed Mr Burke had to "front up".  "What is it that Tony Burke wanted to say to Save the Children, that he  didn't want a public servant present in the room for?" Senator Paterson  said.
 
 He also lashed Mr Burke for thanking the group from staying out of headlines,  saying: "The minister thanks Save the Children for keeping this out of  the media. He says he doesn't want public attention on this.
 
 "Why would a Minister for Home Affairs, whose duty is to protect the Australian  people want to keep this information secret from the public?" A separate  document revealed a US-supported repatriation effort was also on the cards  for the group, however, it is understood that was blocked by Home Affairs by  refusing to hand over the group's passports.
 
 The August letter, authored by Mr Dabbousy and Save the Children chief  executive Mat Tinkler, detailed the US government's offer to provide support  in returning the ISIS brides to Australia.
 
 It is dated two months after the meeting with Mr Burke.
 
 A statement from Mr Burke said the notes and letter were consistent with the  government's position. "There was a request from Save the Children to  conduct a repatriation operation. It was refused," it said.
 
 "There was no repatriation and no assistance. Public servants did what  they were legally obliged to do and no more."

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