Penny Wong warns IS-linked families face 'full force of the law' if they return to Australia

"What I can say is this, these are Australian citizens and the government is not assisting them to come home," she said in Adelaide on Monday ahead of a trip to Asia where she will be seeking to secure more fuel for Australia "And if they do come home, they will face the full force of the law."One woman has already been banned from returning to Australia under a temporary exclusion order.Wong indicated no further temporary exclusion orders had been issued.Wong is scheduled to arrive in Japan on Monday night, and will also visit China and South Korea, seeking to shore up Australia's fuel supplies.As with previous trips led by her and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Wong will seek to leverage Australia's food and natural gas exports in exchange for more fuel."We want to remain a reliable supplier and we want to see Australia prioritised when it comes to diesel, petrol and fertiliser," she told reporters in Adelaide before her departure."The Strait of Hormuz supplies about 80 per cent of the oil to our region, so Australia and the countries of the region are disproportionately affected