It is believed a New Zealand woman and her two children who were detained at the Turkish border while trying to enter from Syria will be deported.
The Turkish Ministry of National Defence alleges the woman - named as Suhayra Aden - is a terrorist belonging to Islamic State.
RNZ correspondent Vehbi Bas said Turkey has dropped charges against the 25-year-old and has begun procedures to deport her.
He said internal Turkish police correspondence shows she was taken to a deportation centre on Tuesday.
Aden acquired dual nationality after moving to Australia when she was six and travelled to Syria from there in 2014 to join Islamic State leading to Australia stripping her of citizenship last year.
While it is unclear where Aden will be deported to, Turkish authorities are referring to her as a New Zealand citizen in official documents.
A Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade spokesperson told Newshub they will not be releasing details of this case for privacy reasons.
"This is a complex matter that we are working through with Turkish and Australian authorities," the spokesperson said.
- Anti-terror measures vs digital freedom
- Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison hits back at Jacinda Ardern in terrorist citizenship row
- Ban on gun ads infuriates organisers of a Taranaki antique firearms event
- Chief Censor David Shanks says an entirely new media regulator may be needed
Meanwhile, the Government has been refusing to disclose details on the welfare of the woman and her two children.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has previously told RNZ it is giving them consular assistance.
But citing privacy reasons, it has not provided information on their welfare, and whether the woman has been charged, or is being deported.
Earlier this week the announcement that Australia had taken away the woman's citizenship led the Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern lashing out at the decision and accusing Australia of walking away from its responsibilities.
Ardern and Australia's Prime Minister Scott Morrison discussed the matter in a phone call on Tuesday night with Ardern labelling the talks as "constructive".
A statement released afterwards said Australia and New Zealand are "working through those issues in the spirit of our relationship".