Islamic State training kidnapped children to become suicide bombers
By Mark Ellis and Cindy Gutierrez, Speciala to ASSIST News Service
Because
of his pronounced limp he was freed, taken home by his grandmother, and
now resides in a refugee camp. His 5-year-old brother, Saman, was
released with him. Repeated beatings traumatized him so badly that he
asked CNN reporters if they were there to beat him. He often wakes up
screaming from nightmares.
The parents of both boys remain in captivity.
“They
asked us to come with them for the training,” Nouri said. “At first we
refused to go because we were afraid. They asked me to go to the
mountain and I refused again, then they broke my leg. That saved me. The
other children were taken by force.”
The
use of captive children to perform suicide missions is not only the
latest evidence of ISIS savagery. It is also the most terrifying.
That’s
because when the boys are sent into the No Man’s Land between ISIS
soldiers and Kurdish Peshmerga fighters, the Peshmerga never know if the
children are truly escaping or if they will detonate a bomb.
“Many
times when we are facing ISIS, we see the children at the front line
and they’re wearing explosive vests. They are brainwashed,” said Aziz
Abdullah Hadur, a Peshmerga commander. “When they make it through our
lines they kill our fighters. It’s an unbelievably hard decision. You
don’t know what to do because if you don’t kill them they’ll kill you.”
“We
weren’t allowed to cry but I would think about my mother, think about
her worrying about me and I’d try and cry quietly,” Nasir said. “When we
escaped and I saw my mother again, it was like coming back to life.”
Nasir
was one of several children in an ISIS propaganda video made at the Al
Farouq Institute in Raqqua, Syria. In it, a row of children are forced
to rigidly repeat their captors’ mantra: “To jihad. To jihad.”
One
boy is shaking. The majority cannot raise their faces to look at the
camera. Their trainer exults in front of them: “By god’s grace in the
coming days, they will be at the front lines of the fight against the
non-believers.”
These so-called “cubs of the Caliphate” are told the ISIS trainers love them more than their parents.
“When
they were training us they would tell us our parents were unbelievers
and that our first job was to go back to kill them,” said Nasir, his
face covered and his voice altered by CNN.
“There
were 60 of us,” Nasir said. “They told us the Americans, the
unbelievers, were trying to kill us, but they, the fighters, they loved
us. They would look after us better than our parents.”
Khalid Nermo Zedo is a Yazidi worker who founded the refugee camp called Esyan, where Nasir now resides.
“They
have suffered so much,” she said. “Can you imagine a 12-year-old child
or a 10-year-old or an 8-year-old dragged from their mother by force,
taken to military training camps, forced to carry weapons, forced to
convert to Islam, told everything they grew up believing is apostasy.
That their parents are unclean ‘unbelievers?’”
Photo captions: 1) Two boys in training as suicide bombers. 2) A young suicide bomber in training. 3) Mark Ellis.
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