
If They’d Been ISIS Brides, Canberra Would Be Helping
If only the Iranian women’s football team were ISIS brides, our government would have pulled out all stops to help them.
But rather than help to establish a violent caliphate, the Iranian girls used their tour of Australia to quietly defy an Islamic regime.
That was their mistake. In modern Australia, opposing Islamists rather than supporting them is the wrong kind of courage.
The Albanese Government has a peculiar allergy to confronting radical Islam. It breaks out in bureaucratic hives.
But when it comes to assisting Islamists, it can be surprisingly energetic…
A Silent Protest Against Tehran
Iranian state television labelled the Iranian women “war-time traitors” for failing to sing their national anthem before a game on the Gold Coast last week.
In Tehran, there are calls for them to be tried for treason and “dealt with severely”.
Exiled Iranian crown prince Reza Pahlavi warned that “as a result of their brave act of civil disobedience in refusing to sing the current regime’s national anthem, they face dire consequences should they return to Iran”.
In other words, these women may have committed the unforgivable crime of demonstrating a conscience.
In a free country, that sort of behaviour is applauded. In Iran, it’s prosecuted.
And yet here in Australia, where our political class rarely misses an opportunity to congratulate itself for defending women’s rights, the official response has been something approaching a polite shrug.
You might imagine that the Albanese Government, endlessly lecturing us about “standing with women”, would show a flicker of urgency to help these women.
You would imagine wrong.
Courage Meets Bureaucratic Indifference
Ask the Albanese Government to help a group of burqa-wearing Islamic State supporters get from Syria to Western Sydney, where they can live happily ever after, and you’ll get a wink and a nod.
Immigration Minister Tony Burke will hold secret meetings to discuss how it might be done.
But help courageous Persian women here in Australia avoid death for daring to defy the mullahs?
Well, steady on.
Suddenly, the machinery of compassion grinds to a halt, and the government discovers a deep and abiding respect for process.
“No special treatment,” Assistant Minister Matt Thistehwaite told Sky News on Sunday morning.
Celebrating Women While Ignoring Their Plight
And while the Iranian players were being told, in effect, “best of luck back home,” Labor politicians were busy celebrating International Women’s Day.
Federal and State Labor MPs were posting happy snaps of themselves with women in Parliament.
Take South Australia’s Peter Malinauskas, for example. He tweeted:
“You’re looking at the first ever South Australian Cabinet where there are more women than men.
“We don’t just talk about backing women. We back them to lead our government.
“International Women’s Day can’t just be a date on the calendar.
“Equality is something we all need to fight for.
“Every. Single. Day.”
Except, apparently, on the day a busload of Iranian women quietly begs the free world for help.
Now, yes — in fairness — asylum and visas are a federal responsibility, not a state one.
But the irony remains thick enough to butter toast.
On Sunday, we had Labor— at Federal and State level — boasting about fighting for women while doing less than nothing to help women who are literally for their lives.
The contrast is almost impressive: endless speeches about empowerment on one hand, and a very careful avoidance of the women who might actually need empowering on the other.
As the Iranian team left their Gold Coast hotel last night, one of the players appeared to gesture for help through the bus window.
A small, desperate signal.
Sadly for her, she’s not the kind of woman our government rushes to rescue.
If only she’d been an ISIS bride.
___
Republished with thanks to The James Macpherson Report. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
8 Comments
Leave A Comment
Recent Articles:
5 June 2026
3 MINS
Long-time environmental activist Drew Hutton cites party's shift toward "extremism" and "cult-like" authoritarianism leading him to formally part ways with the party he co-founded.
5 June 2026
7.6 MINS
The case of Henry Nowak has become a lightning rod for concerns about policing, justice, and cultural change in Britain, prompting outrage, debate, and calls for accountability.
5 June 2026
2 MINS
After criticising the ABC’s decision to hire Grace Tame, Charlie Pickering quickly changed his tune, raising questions about pressure, media conformity and the limits of acceptable dissent.
5 June 2026
5.1 MINS
In what must be the greatest walkaway of a half-completed mega-building project since the Tower of Babel, the Albanese Government has scarpered from the Inland Rail project midway through construction. Minister for Infrastructure Catherine King delivered the fatal blow on 5 May.
4 June 2026
2.7 MINS
Last Thursday, we witnessed something truly remarkable. The Australian Christian Freedom Index (ACFI) launch at Parliament House exceeded even our highest hopes — and God's generosity was unmistakable.
4 June 2026
5.3 MINS
The murder of 18-year-old Henry Nowak has reignited debate over policing, race, multiculturalism, and DEI policies, following allegations that officers prioritized racism claims over a dying victim.
4 June 2026
5.2 MINS
A major new report warns that Christian freedoms in Australia are under increasing pressure, documenting legal restrictions, personal testimonies, and growing concerns about religious liberty.






Outrageous are we living in Australia? No, we’re living in a nightmare of double standards, no compassion, supporting wrong ideology. Where will it all end?
Maureen, very sadly it’s highly likely to end very badly indeed. Nobody can name a single country where Islam has become the dominant culture that has prospered.
Thankfully, 5 of those Persian Princesses were granted asylum last night; but what about the rest of the team and what about the North Koreans playing in WA?
Nearly a decade ago I helped a Persian refugee appeal the decision of the Australian Government to deport him to Teheran. He had converted to Christianity while in detention and from the minister down, nobody in the immigration department relieved his story. The last avenue was an appeal to the Civil Appeals Tribunal to allow him to stay. Nobody, it seemed, believed that the fate for apostates from Islam and the fate of refugees denied entry to Australia was years of imprisonment at the very least or public execution. I had regular nightmares about this young man’s fate should he be deported. Fortunately the Member of the Civil Appeals Tribunal who heard his appeal knew a thing or two and granted his final appeal to stay.
I support asylum for these girls, I support limited immigration that helps Australia.
But, we need to see the root cause issue of 98% of the worlds problems…
https://x.com/GadSaad/status/2031030656088863048
5 have been granted permission to remain in Australia because at 2 in the morning President Trump rang Albanese to put the hard word on him , saying that if he did not grant them asylum, the USA would ! Trump, must have demanded some aid as well because Australia announced at the same time it is going to send Australian defensive equipment to the Gulf States because we have over 100, 000 Australians living in the UAE which has been attacked. Meanwhile , we have those awful ISIS brides with their radicalised sons many of those fathers are alive in jail, being sneaked in and welcomed. What a disgrace ! Traitors who will with their children be the future 5th column to overthrow Australian democracy and Christianity in Australia. Look at the forced, fake ,crooked smile on the face of Minister Burke who was forced to agree to give asylum to the Iranian girls. It may be that the USA will not be able to defeat Evil Iran ? If that is the case , the day of Destruction of the World with schizophrenic Iran unleashing Nuclear Bombs willy- nilly everywhere is just going to be postponed because no European Powers were brave enough to join Trump and Israel this time. Europe will live to regret not taking action now. We cannot live in peace with a Monster.
I think your article, James, was premature and not well thought out. Where is the evidence that the Govt is wanting to bring back isis brides?
The govt was working behind the scenes to help the Iranian soccer players.
What is the difference between irony,and mockery?
I listened to Tony Burke on television, and he indicated quite plainly that all the girls were given the choice to leave or remain in Australia. Was he lying or not?