Those detained include the four-member 60 Minutes crew, including reporter Tara Brown. Tara Brown and the 60 Minutes crew were detained in Lebanon. Credit:Channel Nine The case revolves around the attempted snatching of two children on the streets of Beirut last Wednesday morning. Their Australian mother Sally Faulkner was working with the British-based firm Child Abduction Recovery International to recover the children from their Lebanese father, Ali Elamine. The 60 Minutes crew was in Lebanon to film the recovery and the ABC has reported that Lebanese authorities have a signed statement from one of the recovery team saying Channel Nine paid $115,000 for the operation.

The four-member TV crew and Ms Faulkner had been detained along with two Britons and two Lebanese who made up the recovery team. Sally Faulkner with her children, Lahala and Noah. Credit:Facebook The operation appears to have been an attempt by Ms Faulkner to get her two children, Lahala, 6, and Noah, 4, back to Australia after Mr Elamine took them to Lebanon last year and refused to let them return. The report of the charges came as the Australian government revealed Foreign Affairs Minister Julie Bishop had discussed the case overnight with her Lebanese counterpart. Sally Faulkner travelled to Lebanon to recover her two children, Lahala and Noah, from their father. Credit:Facebook

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said he was in "very close discussions" with Ms Bishop about the case. "The Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has spoken to the Lebanese foreign minister about it," he said. "Our consular officials are in touch with the journalists and the crew that are in ... prison and we are seeking through the usual diplomatic channels to ensure that they are kept safe and will be able to return." A spokeswoman for Ms Bishop said the government was aware of The Daily Star report, which cited the judicial source as saying the case had been referred to Mount Lebanon general prosecutor Judge Claude Karam, who was likely to charge the seven remaining detainees on Monday. Lahala and Noah were seized off the street in southern Beirut last Wednesday while waiting for a school bus with their grandmother and her maid.

They were freed by police the following day. The children's grandmother - Mr Elamine's mother, Ibtisam Berri - has reportedly claimed she was pistol-whipped as the recovery team snatched the children off the street. Mr Elamine has been quoted by The Guardian as saying he did not want to press charges against his estranged wife. Ms Faulkner's current partner Brendan Pierce told AAP that he and the her family were coping with the ordeal and that she was being treated well. "Everyone in the family is doing well. Sally is being treated right," he said, but would not comment further. "She is being treated right, I can confirm that but I want to leave it there."

He would not say whether he had spoken to Ms Faulkner and would not confirm reports the pair had a three-month-old baby. Nine's head of news and current affairs, Darren Wick, flew out of Australia for Beirut on Sunday morning to try to secure his crew's release. With AAP