Kirsty Rosse-Emile
Kirsty Rosse-Emile is an Australian woman who travelled to Daesh-territory, also known as the Islamic State.[2][3] She converted to Islam when she was a teenager. She married Nabil Kadmiry in 2014, and the pair then travelled to war-torn Syria, to live under Daesh's strict and brutal interpretation of Islamic law.
She gave birth to a boy, in the Al-Hawl refugee camp, in the late fall of 2019.[1] In February, 2020, The Guardian reported that doctors at the camp predicted that her three-year-old daughter's fingers frostbite was so severe they would have to be amputated.[4]
The News reported, in April 2019, that Rosse-Emile was pregnant with her second child, and that her father had tried pleading with Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison's to show “love, compassion and forgiveness”.[3]
The Australian Broadcasting Corporation profiled Rosse-Emile, and other Australian refugees, in October 2021, noting all of them denied they were ever willing participants in the Daesh regime.[5] During an interview, for that profile, Rosse-Emile told reporters she had been happy growing up in Australia.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Michael Bachelard (2019-12-10). "A new Australian baby born in squalor in a Syrian detention camp". Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 2019-12-10. https://web.archive.org/web/20191210105022/https://www.smh.com.au/world/middle-east/a-new-australian-baby-born-in-squalor-in-a-syrian-detention-camp-20191210-p53ioi.html. Retrieved 2021-06-23. "Kirsty Rosse-Emile, 25, holds her two-month-old son Yahya, until this week the youngest Australian detained in al-Hawl camp in the Kurdish-controlled region of Syria."
- ↑ David Wroe, Josh Dye, Erin Pearson (2019-04-04). "What should Australia do with the children of Islamic State?". Sydney Morning Herald (Al-Hawl refugee camp). https://www.smh.com.au/world/middle-east/what-should-australia-do-with-the-children-of-islamic-state-20190404-p51aw8.html. Retrieved 2019-04-07. "Speaking to The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age from al-Hawl camp, 16-year-old Hoda Sharrouf also says she forgives her father and mother, Tara Nettleton, for dragging her to Syria along with her four siblings when she was just 11 years old."
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Ben Graham (2019-04-05). "Parents of pregnant Melbourne woman stuck in Syria plead for PM to let her come home". The News (Australia). Archived from the original on 2021-12-18. https://web.archive.org/web/20211218220938/https://www.news.com.au/world/middle-east/children-of-notorious-islamic-state-terrorist-could-be-brought-to-australia/news-story/e65b4dc8672c555485c20886106ba467. Retrieved 2019-04-07. "Six months’ pregnant, Kirsty Rosse-Emile, 24, used to write about Justin Beiber, AFL scores and the soccer World Cup on her Facebook page before her posts suddenly changed about nine years ago."
- ↑ Ben Doherty (2020-02-17). "Three-year-old Australian girl in Syria's al-Hawl camp may lose fingers to frostbite". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 2020-09-10. https://web.archive.org/web/20200910041430/https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2020/feb/17/three-year-old-australian-girl-in-syrias-al-hawl-camp-may-lose-fingers-to-frostbite. Retrieved 2021-06-23. "Amirah’s mother is Melbourne woman Kirstie Rosse-Emile. Her father is Nabil Kadmiry, a former Isis fighter who had his Australian citizenship stripped last October. It is understood he also holds Moroccan citizenship. He is currently being held in a Kurdish jail."
- ↑ Andrew L. Urban (2022-10-25). "Confessions of a 10-year-old revolutionary". Spectator magazine. Archived from the original on 2022-10-25. https://web.archive.org/web/20221025044150/https://www.spectator.com.au/2022/10/confessions-of-a-10-year-old-revolutionary/. Retrieved 2022-10-29. "All deny they were ever willing participants in the brutal terrorist group, yet for the past two and a half years, 20 Australian women and more than 40 children have been living in detention camps like this one in north-east Syria."