There are five Australian orphans living overseas right now.
They are aged 14, 12, 11, 10 and 5. Sometime in the last fortnight their 31 year old mother died. Their father died last year.
One of those orphans has an eight-week old baby, and at age 14 is already a widow.
They are now stranded in a war-torn foreign country but these orphans aren’t being inundated with an outpouring of public sympathy.
Instead, these children are feared.
Khaled SharroufThey are caught in an ISIS-stronghold in Syria.
These children have made the news many times in recent years because of their parents’ choice to join ISIS.
One of them was the seven year old boy photographed holding the severed head of a man, an image his father tweeted in August 2004.
Their maternal grandmother, Karen Nettleton, has pleaded publicly for help many times. Having now learned of her daughter’s death she is desperate and wants her grandchildren home more than ever.
“She’s very upset that the knowledge has become public but is vitally concerned for the welfare of the children, including her great grandchild who is two months old,” her lawyer Charles Waterstreet told the Guardian Australia.
“They have no protection in Syria where they are, and implore the Australian government to assist in protecting them. At the moment they’re unable to go outside, they have no one to protect them, and the streets are very dangerous places. People are literally falling down in the streets from starvation. We’re trying to get them money but with no success. They all want to come home.”