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    Super Moderator Newmexican's Avatar
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    Isis abducts 600 children ‘to use as suicide bombers’

    Isis abducts 600 children ‘to use as suicide bombers’

    Harry Readhead for Metro.co.uk
    Thursday 14 Jan 2016 2:42 pm





    The children (not pictured) are filling positions in the suicide bomb squadIsis has abducted up to 600 Yazidi children with the reported purpose of training them to be suicide bombers.

    Kurdish authorities said that some 600 children were kidnapped from Iraq’s Sinjar province and the surrounding Yazidi villages, 200 of whom managed to escape, CNN reports.

    The news site said that the most experienced fighters within Daesh were put on the front lines and child soldiers were used mainly to bolster sections of the terror group lacking manpower, specifically suicide bomb squads and sentry positions.

    A 12-year-old boy who was one of the escaped 200 told CNN that he had been trained to be a suicide bomber.




    Children trained by Isis are dubbed ‘cubs of the caliphate’‘There were 60 of us,’ he said.

    ‘The scariest times for us all were when the airstrikes happened. They’d lead all of us underground into the tunnels to hide.

    ‘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.’

    He added that the junior ‘members’ of Daesh were known as ‘cubs of the caliphate’, and the youngest boy was five years old.

    Read more: http://metro.co.uk/2016/01/14/isis-a...#ixzz3xEoyV76F

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    Mass graves, missing children: Evidence of brutality in Iraqi town of Sinjar

    By Nima Elbagir, CNN
    Updated 1216 GMT (2016 HKT) January 13, 2016



    The children who escaped the clutches of ISIS 03:47 in video at the link

    Sinjar, Iraq (CNN)Sinjar is yielding up its secrets -- the whispers of those who prayed as they were killed. Grief for those captured and never seen again.

    Mahama al-Shangali is the mayor of this town of fewer than 90,000 people in northern Iraq, in the heart of Yazidi country.

    When ISIS swept through the Yazidi homeland, it was along the road into Sinjar that men, women and children who had been rounded up from the surrounding villages were driven.

    Evidence of a massacre

    As the mayor walks us to the other side of the heaped earth defenses that encircle the town, he tells us this was the site of an ISIS massacre.

    This is where they buried the young men, the women and the boys -- children, really -- who refused to accompany ISIS. Who refused to be conscripted by the terrorist group as child soldiers.

    Witnesses tell CNN that the victims in in these graves, more than 130 of them, had been selected to be taken to the nearby ISIS-controlled town of Tal Afar.

    But they refused to go. So they were killed, young and old alike.

    Standing at the gravesite, I could still see tossed on the ground the cloth ties that bound their hands. The prayer beads they clutched until the end.

    And I saw the empty bullet casings spit out by the guns fired by their killers.

    Some Yazidis living in camps

    From there we moved to a refugee camp, one of the many that now dot northern Iraq. Those who managed to flee ISIS have found refuge here.

    Kurdish authorities tell CNN they have evidence that about 600 children were abducted from Sinjar and the surrounding Yazidi villages.

    Around 200 have since escaped and are sheltering in camps like this one across the Kurdish region.

    The Yazidis are linked to the ancient religions of this region. They believe in a single deity and a world ruled by seven angels, chief among them Melek Taus, the Peacock Angel.

    ISIS considers the Yazidis to be devil-worshippers and wants to eliminate them. Killing and forced conversion of the Yazidis are espoused by ISIS as religious duties.

    Setbacks prompt ISIS to seek more child soldiers

    But ISIS' desire to recruit children goes beyond that. U.S. military sources tell CNN that, with the loss of the key Iraqi city of Ramadi, the militant group is feeling the pressure. So it is increasingly pulling experienced fighters to the front line and replacing them in sentry positions -- and on suicide bomb squads -- with children.

    Beyond the prayer beads and the bodies, the testimony of those still living is haunting.












    Ghazal Issa Omar sits with us on the floor of her tent. Alongside her are her two sons and their cousins. All four children were conscripted by ISIS during their raid on Sinjar. Under her gentle translation, the boys answer the questions as best they can.
    Her 8-year-old son, Iman, has a shy gap-toothed smile.

    The rifle he was given to carry hurt his arms, he says. But when he dropped it, the beatings would start.

    Ghazal says the children were taken to the Badush prison in Mosul.

    "They were taking them as shields. Raising them up high so that the airplanes could see them and wouldn't bomb them."
    Iman's brother Assim is still only 10.

    He tries to describe what it was like for them in the prison.

    "When they took us to Mosul, to the Badush prison, they locked us in there," he says. "They treated us violently. I've never been beaten like this before. It was like dying."

    A hope to identify the dead

    "At night, when the planes came, that was when it was scariest. In the dark, we would huddle together. All us boys just holding on to each other."

    None of them dared cry, though, he says, terrified of the beatings that would bring from their captors.

    The day they managed to escape was the first time Assim allowed himself to cry. That was the day he finally saw his mother again.
    Back at the outskirts of Sinjar, in the near distance, we can see smoke rising from a mortar strike into an ISIS encampment.

    Mass graves honeycomb the valley leading to the boundary of their territory. On the ground, the mayor spots a fragment of what appears to be a child's skull. Delicately -- reverently -- he places it on top of the grave.

    One day, he tells us, he hopes it will be safe enough here for forensic investigators to come and identify the children who lie beneath this this rubble.
    http://edition.cnn.com/2016/01/12/mi...r-mass-graves/





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