Manawatu Standard

Isis ‘cubs’ on mass suicide mission

- IRAQ The Times

Islamic State has unleashed a wave of child suicide bombers – ‘‘cubs of the caliphate’’ – on civilian targets in Iraq and Turkey.

Within 24 hours, two children are believed to have detonated their devices and a third was foiled.

Pictures emerged yesterday of the boy who was prevented from triggering his explosives in the Iraqi city of Kirkuk on Monday. They showed a bomb belt strapped around his stomach, covered by a Barcelona football shirt bearing striker Lionel Messi’s name.

A police source said the boy had been born in 2000 in Mosul, which is controlled by Isis. They said he appeared to have been drugged.

His capture was caught on camera by a TV crew from Rudaw, an Iraqi Kurdish news channel.

The boy burst into tears as he was held by two uniformed men and stripped to the waist. After they cut the belt off him, he was put in a police van and driven away.

He was caught soon after police said that another young suicide bomber had attacked a mosque in Kirkuk. The boy, whose age has not been confirmed, died and two people were wounded in the explosion in the Shia-dominated southern suburbs of the city.

Two roadside bombs were discovered and defused at the same time.

The two child attackers in Kirkuk struck after a devastatin­g suicide bomb attack at a Kurdish wedding party in the southern Turkish city of Gaziantep on Sunday, which President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey said had been carried out by a child aged between 12 and 14. The bomb killed 53 people, most of whom were children, some as young as 4, and injured dozens more.

Gaziantep is 50 kilometres from the Syrian border and is home to about 350,000 Syrian refugees. It has long been suspected that Isis has cells in the city. An Isis suicide bomb in the city in May killed three police officers.

Mevlut Cavusoglu, the Turkish foreign minister, said that Isis ‘‘must be cleansed from our border’’.

Isis is increasing­ly launching attacks on civilian targets in the Middle East and Europe as it loses territory in Iraq and Syria. It has been pushed out of several stronghold­s this year by Kurdish, Sunni and Shia forces, as well as a Western coalition and the Iraqi and Syrian national armies.

Isis has previously used children for suicide attacks on military targets in Iraq and Syria. The three new incidents coming so close together have raised fears that Isis, which has trained children to become jihadists, has sent them to attack targets outside the battlefiel­d.

The terrorist group’s use of child soldiers is well documented, and scores of children who have escaped its territory have told how they were indoctrina­ted at the Al Zarqawi training camp, named after a former al Qaeda chief.

Child soldiers have also appeared in disturbing Isis propaganda videos, including one in which a group of pre-pubescent boys killed Syrian soldiers by shooting them in the head in the amphitheat­re of the ancient desert city of Palmyra.

Last year two children who had escaped from Tel Abyad, a Syrian city then under Isis control, said there were waiting lists for wouldbe suicide bombers, such was the extent of Isis brainwashi­ng.

The terrorist group teaches that fighters who kill themselves in the cause of jihad will ascend straight to heaven, even though suicide is considered a sin in Islam.

At least 89 children died fighting for Isis last year, and three times as many children fought for the group in 2015 than in the previous year.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Iraqi security forces remove a suicide bomb belt from a boy before he could detonate it in Kirkuk.
PHOTO: REUTERS Iraqi security forces remove a suicide bomb belt from a boy before he could detonate it in Kirkuk.

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