Samra Kesinović (17) and Sabina Selimović (15), girls who announced a few months ago that they fled Europe and now live in Syria, allegedly contacted their families and told them they wanted to return home.
"We are fed up with living in the Islamic State and the jihadists," is the message of the girls, who the Telegraph reports also became pregnant during their lives in Syria.
Unfortunately, returning home is not easy to do.
Austrian authorities say current laws do not allow the girls to return home.
"It is almost impossible for them to return home now," said the spokesman of the Austrian Ministry of the Interior.
The girls announced the information that they were going to Syria a few months ago on their profiles on social networks.
According to Central European News, Bosnian teenage girls married two Chechen fighters fighting for ISIL in Syria. After they posed with automatic rifles in their hands and openly supported ISIL on social networks, the world began to call them "the new faces of jihad".
Interpol and the Austrian police are intensively looking for them, the intelligence services closely monitor their posts on social networks.
Police fear that ISIL is using the two teenage girls to recruit more women into its ranks. Two more girls were recently caught trying to cross the Austrian border to also join ISIL.
The families of the girls claim that the radical imam Abu Tayma is responsible for their disappearance. Shortly before the disappearance, the girls went to his mosque. In their posts on Facebook, the girls posted photos of themselves surrounded by people carrying weapons.
"Death is our goal," reads one of their announcements.
Bonus video:
