Overview
- Camp officials said 11 Australian families — 34 women and children — departed Roj for Damascus as part of a route intended to lead home.
- Multiple outlets later reported the convoy was turned back to Roj following Syrian government intervention, with some sources describing the issue as technical or procedural.
- Roj camp authorities said relatives traveled from Australia to accompany the group and planned to continue via Beirut to seek passports at the Australian embassy.
- The Australian government stated it will not repatriate people from Syria, while security agencies are monitoring any independent returns and warn of possible prosecutions.
- Roj still holds roughly 2,200 people from dozens of nationalities, as a recent ceasefire and planned handovers to Syrian authorities complicate operations and NGOs warn children remain at serious risk.