Notorious Australian terrorist's children on the way home after being evacuated from refugee camp

The Australian government has evacuated eight children of two dead Islamic State fighters from a Syrian refugee camp, saying they should not be punished for the crimes of their parents.

In the group are the offspring of jihadist Khaled Sharrouf, including his heavily pregnant 17-year-old daughter Zaynab and her own two daughters, his son Humzeh, eight, and another daughter Hoda, 16, The Australian reported on Monday.

The others are three children aged between six and 12, who are the offspring of IS fighter Yasin Rizvic and his wife, Fauzia Khamal Bacha, who is also dead.

The operation has been confirmed by Prime Minister Scott Morrison.

"Repatriating these children was not a decision the Australian government made lightly," he told The Australian.

"The fact that parents put their children into harm's way by taking them into a war zone was a despicable act," he added,

Pictured are the five children of Australian Islamic State terrorist Khaled Shrrouf in their home in NSW.
The children of notorious Islamic State terrorist Khaled Sharrouf at their home in NSW. Source: Supplied

"However, children should not be punished for the crimes of their parents."

The operation to repatriate the children has been under consideration for months.

The Sharrouf children were in April reunited with their Sydney grandmother, Karen Nettleton, in al-Hawl camp in northern Syria where those fleeing ISIS last enclave at Baghouz ended up.

It's believed Mrs Nettleton, who had not seen her grandchildren since 2014, had been negotiating with officials to bring them back to Australia.

Sharrouf was killed in an air strike in September 2017, along with - it's believed - his two older sons, Abdullah, 12, and Zarqawi, 11.

The children's mother, Mrs Nettleton's daughter Tara, died of medical complications in 2015.

Islamic State terrorist Khaled Sharrouf (pictured) and his two eldest sons were killed in a US air strike on Syria in 2017.
The children of Islamic State terrorist Khaled Sharrouf have been evacuated from a Syrian refugee camp. Source: Supplied

Zaynab told the ABC in April she and her siblings had no choice over being taken into the war zone.

"We weren't the ones that chose to come here in the first place," she told the Four Corners program.

"We were brought here by our parents. And now that our parents are gone, we want to live. And for me and my children I want to live a normal life just like anyone would want to live a normal life."

Her sister Hoda, who was 11 when she was taken out of Australia, told Four Corners: "I didn't know I was in Syria until after we crossed the borders and I heard people speaking Arabic."

"I asked my mum where we were. And she told me we were in Syria. I started crying."

The Sharrouf children shot to notoriety when their father released a photograph of Abdullah holding the severed head of a Syrian man.

Both sets of children are being taken to a "safe location" outside of Syria before making the journey to Australia where they are likely to be settled in Melbourne, The Australian said.

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