Salwa Abas stands out in the busy school drop-off: she is the only child escorted by a guard.
Classmates tease the five-year-old for living in a "jail" and when she returns home, each pocket of her bag is searched.
Salwa and her sister Yasmin, 3, are Australian citizens. But they have been living with their mother behind locked gates at Villawood detention centre for almost a year, after the federal government cancelled their mother's visa. 
In doing so, the government acknowledged the decision was not in the children's best interests. Their mother Zahra, who is pregnant with her third child, has begged Immigration Minister Peter Dutton to intervene.
"They were happy Australian kids, why [did the government] do this to them? They don't deserve to be here," she told Fairfax Media from inside the detention centre. "[My children] are really upset inside and they are asking me, 'What are we doing for Christmas, are we getting out? Why are we here?'."
Ms Abas, originally from Iraq, arrived on a boat from Indonesia in 2009 with other family members. They were taken to Christmas Island and then granted protection.
Her father, known as Captain Emad, arrived in Australia in 2010. He fled two years later after the ABC's Four Corners program alleged he was running a people-smuggling racket from Canberra.
The case cast a spotlight on his family, and the Department of Immigration determined Ms Abas, who was 19 when she arrived in Australia, had falsified information on her visa application.
Ms Abas said this week her father was "abusive, controlling and angry" and told the family to lie to immigration officials about their names and background.
"In Indonesia, he wanted to break my legs because I wanted to run away from him, and he took a hammer and hit my leg and I got stitches from it," she said.
Under the former Labor government, the department said that while Ms Abas had breached her obligations under migration law, her visa would not be cancelled. But in   December last year, then-immigration minister Scott Morrison intervened to cancel Ms Abas' visa.
Mr Morrison wrote that she had been living in Malaysia for many years, rather than in Iraq where she claimed to have suffered persecution, and should not have been granted a protection visa. He said there was no evidence she was under duress from her father.
"Notwithstanding that the best interests of the dependent children would be served by a decision not to cancel the mother's visa, this is outweighed by the seriousness of the non-compliance," he wrote.
Ms Abas was taken into detention in   January, and lives in residential-style housing. Her Australian citizen husband suffers medical problems and cannot care for the children, forcing them to live with their mother at Villawood.
Ms Abas' husband visits the family in detention and she is 21 weeks pregnant. She is also severely depressed and fears for the future of her unborn baby and daughters.
Salwa, once a bubbly child with many friends who loved the film Frozen, is now lonely and suffers nightmares. Yasmin has become unhappy and clingy.
"Every day [Salwa] says 'I had a really bad day, I hate this school, I hate you, I hate this place', and then she goes in her room and cries. She doesn't want to go out, she doesn't want to eat," Ms Abas said.
"It's like a jail - you have no freedom, no control over your life or your children's life."
Mr Dutton and Immigration refused to answer questions regarding Ms Abas.